How to calculate 10-year SAVE timeline

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Beginning in February, certain student loan borrowers who have spent a decade in repayment will get their federal student loan debt forgiven, the Biden administration recently announced.

Most borrowers need to make payments for 20 years or 25 years on an income-driven repayment plan before their debt is erased. But under the U.S. Department of Education’s new repayment program, called the Saving on a Valuable Education, or SAVE, plan, those who took out $12,000 or less will get their debt erased after just a decade.

To qualify for the aid, you’ll also need to make sure you have eligible federal student loans and that you’re enrolled in the SAVE plan.

Here’s what to know about the 10-year timeline to forgiveness.

Pandemic-era payment pause counts

Other forbearances, deferments may count, too

President Biden's ambitious new plan to help student loan borrowers, explained

But it seems that forbearances could qualify toward forgiveness: either 12 consecutive months in a forbearance, or 36 cumulative months, a Department of Education spokesperson told CNBC. Time spent in an economic hardship deferment, and other deferments, such as the deferments for cancer and unemployment, may also get you credit, depending on when you were enrolled.

You should also eventually get credit for time spent in repayment before a loan consolidation.

There may be an option to pay for forgiveness

The Department of Education added that borrowers, in time, can make “buyback” payments to get credit for any periods in deferments or forbearances that didn’t count toward forgiveness.

But the spokesperson said that option hasn’t been implemented yet. “We will provide more detail on it when it is going live,” they said.

If your calculated payment under SAVE is currently $0, “the cost to the borrower for the buyback will be zero, letting them get all the other deferments and forbearances covered at no additional cost,” said higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz. “It’s a pretty sweet deal.”

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