Seven Republican-led states sued the Biden administration in 2024 to kill the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) student loan repayment plan. After nearly two years of litigation, they won. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit reversed a lower court’s dismissal of Missouri v. Trump on March 10, 2026, directing entry of a December 2025 settlement that permanently vacated the SAVE Final Rule.
The case originated in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Missouri, MDL-adjacent litigation that drew parallel challenges in the District of Kansas. SAVE — created under the Higher Education Act by the Biden-Harris administration in 2023 — now has no legal basis. More than 7 million borrowers enrolled in the plan must move to a different repayment option.
- What: Courts permanently vacated the SAVE income-driven repayment plan after Republican AGs sued to block it as an unlawful overreach of executive authority.
- Who: 7+ million enrolled borrowers vs. seven Republican-led states led by Missouri AG, backed by Trump DOJ
- Status: Closed — SAVE Final Rule vacated March 10, 2026 by Eighth Circuit order
- Injuries: Loss of reduced monthly payments, loan forgiveness progress, and $0-payment eligibility for millions of low-income borrowers
- Settlement: December 2025 settlement between Trump DOJ and Missouri AG entered as final judgment; no borrower compensation
- Eligibility: All SAVE enrollees must transition to IBR, PAYE, ICR, or RAP (launching July 1, 2026)
- Key date: July 1, 2026 — loan servicers begin sending 90-day transition notices to SAVE borrowers

SAVE Plan Lawsuit Timeline — Missouri v. Trump
July 2023 — Biden Administration Launches SAVE
The Biden-Harris administration introduced SAVE as the most affordable income-driven repayment (IDR) plan ever created under the Higher Education Act. The first phase — raising the protected income threshold from 150% to 225% of the federal poverty line — took effect immediately.
Over 8 million borrowers enrolled. For many, monthly payments dropped to $0. The plan also prevented interest from accruing when borrowers made their required payments, a provision no prior IDR plan included.
March 2024 — Kansas Files First Lawsuit
On March 28, 2024, Kansas Attorney General Kris Kobach filed a federal challenge to SAVE in the U.S. District Court for the District of Kansas, backed by 11 Republican-led states. The suit argued SAVE amounted to backdoor mass student debt cancellation the Supreme Court had already prohibited in Biden v. Nebraska (2023).
The states argued Congress — not the executive branch — holds authority over federal loan repayment structures. Days later, U.S. District Judge Daniel Crabtree declined to issue a preliminary injunction blocking the plan.
April 2024 — Missouri Coalition Files Second Lawsuit
A second coalition of seven states — Missouri, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, North Dakota, Ohio, and Oklahoma — filed a parallel lawsuit in the Eastern District of Missouri on April 9, 2024. Missouri AG Andrew Bailey led the challenge. The two cases proceeded on separate tracks through the summer.
Together, the plaintiff states represented a coordinated legal strategy: pressure SAVE from two federal circuits simultaneously to maximize the odds of an injunction.
July 18, 2024 — 8th Circuit Issues Sweeping Injunction
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit issued an order halting SAVE in its entirety on July 18, 2024. The court found the states were likely to succeed on the merits and that the balance of harms favored blocking the program.
Then-Education Secretary Miguel Cardona announced that all 8 million SAVE enrollees would be placed into an interest-free administrative forbearance while litigation continued. Months in forbearance would not count toward Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) or IDR forgiveness timelines.
January 2025 — Trump Administration Takes Over
President Trump took office January 20, 2025. The new administration immediately signaled it had no intention of defending SAVE. The Department of Education, now led by Secretary Linda McMahon, called the program “illegal” and began coordinating with plaintiff states toward a settlement.
That pattern is familiar: a new administration abandoning the prior administration’s defense of a regulatory program it opposed politically — and using hostile litigation as the vehicle to accelerate its dismantlement.
August 2025 — Interest Resumes on SAVE Loans
The interest-free forbearance ended in August 2025. Borrowers in SAVE began accruing interest again — even though no payments were due and the program remained legally blocked.
For a borrower with $30,000 in loans at 6% interest, that meant approximately $150 per month compounding with no loan forgiveness credit accumulating. Millions of borrowers watched their balances grow for reasons entirely outside their control.
July 4, 2025 — One Big Beautiful Bill Act Signed
Congress passed and President Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) into law. The statute codified the elimination of SAVE, PAYE, and ICR — setting a statutory termination date of July 1, 2028 for all three programs.
The OBBBA simultaneously created the new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP), set to launch July 1, 2026. RAP calculates payments at 1% to 10% of adjusted gross income, with a $10 minimum for borrowers earning under $10,000 annually. Loan forgiveness under RAP requires 30 years of repayment, compared to 20–25 years under most legacy IDR plans.
December 9, 2025 — Trump DOJ and Missouri Agree to Settle
The Department of Education announced a proposed settlement with the Missouri AG coalition. Under the agreement, ED agreed to: stop enrolling new SAVE borrowers, deny all pending applications, transition all current enrollees to other plans, and pursue formal rulemaking to repeal the SAVE Final Rule.
The settlement also required ED to notify Missouri’s attorney general at least 30 days before forgiving more than $10 billion in student loans in any one-month period. That notification requirement would last 10 years. Critics called it an extraordinary concession — giving a state AG supervisory power over federal debt cancellation decisions.
February 27, 2026 — District Court Dismisses the Case
Here is where it gets complicated. U.S. District Judge John A. Ross refused to enter the settlement as final judgment. Instead, he dismissed Missouri v. Trump without prejudice for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
His reasoning: with a new administration in office that agreed with the plaintiff states, no genuine adversarial dispute existed before the court. Both parties wanted the same outcome. A federal court cannot enter final judgment in a non-adversarial proceeding. The injunction blocking SAVE dissolved automatically.
February 28 – March 4, 2026 — Brief Revival, Then Chaos
The dismissal technically revived SAVE. The injunction was gone. Borrowers and advocacy groups celebrated. Senate Democrats sent a letter to Secretary McMahon demanding SAVE be immediately implemented. The Department of Education refused.
Undersecretary Nicholas Kent issued a statement declaring the department would not implement SAVE regardless of the dismissal. Borrowers who contacted servicers were denied lower payments. The Department treated SAVE as dead even without a court order saying so.
March 5, 2026 — Republican AGs Emergency Appeal to 8th Circuit
Eight Republican state AGs filed an emergency appeal to the Eighth Circuit, asking the court to reinstate the injunction and reverse the dismissal. The Trump DOJ filed jointly, asking the court to enter the December settlement as final judgment without further proceedings.
What matters here is what that joint filing revealed: the Trump administration and Republican AGs were now aligned against the federal court’s independent judgment. Both parties wanted the court to act — just not through the normal adversarial process Judge Ross had required.
March 10, 2026 — 8th Circuit Permanently Ends SAVE
The Eighth Circuit panel acted swiftly and decisively. It reversed Judge Ross’s dismissal. It directed the district court to enter the December 2025 settlement as final judgment. The SAVE Final Rule was vacated.
Within hours, four student loan borrowers represented by Public Goods Practice, LLP filed a new federal lawsuit in Washington, D.C., arguing the Department of Education was compelled to implement SAVE under federal administrative law. That case faces long odds given the Eighth Circuit’s ruling.
What the Lawsuit Actually Alleged — and Who Was Right
The core allegation from plaintiff states was straightforward: SAVE exceeded the executive branch’s authority under the Higher Education Act. Congress authorized income-driven repayment, the states argued, but did not authorize the Education Department to set payments so low they effectively cancel debt over time.
The Supreme Court’s 2023 decision in Biden v. Nebraska — which struck down the broad $20,000 debt cancellation program under the HEROES Act — loomed over the SAVE litigation. Plaintiff states argued SAVE was the same move through a different door. Lower monthly payments for millions of low-income borrowers, quicker forgiveness timelines, and non-accruing interest provisions, the states argued, amounted to mass debt cancellation through regulatory design.
The Biden administration countered that SAVE was a legitimate exercise of the Higher Education Act’s explicit authority to create income-contingent repayment plans. Federal courts never ruled definitively on the merits. The Eighth Circuit’s July 2024 injunction found the states were “likely to succeed” — but that is a preliminary standard, not a final ruling. The December 2025 settlement and subsequent vacatur resolved the litigation without a merits decision. The legal question of whether SAVE was lawful remains formally unanswered.
What SAVE Actually Did — and What Borrowers Are Losing
SAVE was not a standard income-driven repayment plan. It restructured several foundational mechanics of federal student loan repayment simultaneously.
- Payments set at 5% of discretionary income for undergraduate loans (down from 10% under IBR)
- Protected income threshold raised from 150% to 225% of the federal poverty line
- Interest subsidy: no interest accrued when borrowers made required payments
- Shorter forgiveness timeline for small-balance borrowers: 10 years for loans under $12,000
- $0 monthly payment eligibility for borrowers earning under ~$32,800 individually
For a borrower earning $40,000 per year with $30,000 in undergraduate loans, SAVE would have produced monthly payments of roughly $70–90. Under IBR, the same borrower pays approximately $130–150 per month. That gap compounds across 20 years of repayment. It is not a minor difference — it is thousands of dollars.
The non-accruing interest provision was the most consequential feature many borrowers didn’t fully understand. Under every prior IDR plan, unpaid interest accrues even when borrowers make required payments. Balances can grow even when borrowers do everything right. SAVE eliminated that dynamic. With SAVE gone, interest accrual resumes on the same terms as legacy plans.
The Dismissal-Reversal Whiplash: What Borrowers Were Promised and What They Got
The brief dismissal of Missouri v. Trump on February 27, 2026, was not a minor procedural event. Advocacy groups declared victory. Borrowers who had waited nearly two years received notification that SAVE benefits were technically restored. Senators demanded implementation within days.
The Department of Education refused. It ignored the court’s dismissal and continued treating SAVE as illegal. That refusal produced a 10-day window of legal limbo where borrowers faced a government that acknowledged no court order currently blocked SAVE but refused to act anyway.
The Eighth Circuit’s March 10 ruling ended that limbo decisively. The pattern the timeline tells: judicial independence asserted by Judge Ross, immediately overridden by an appellate court acting on a joint government-plaintiff emergency motion. No oral argument. No merits analysis. A final judgment entered in days.
That is what the plaintiffs argue: the legal validity of SAVE was never tested at trial. The program died not because a court found it unlawful, but because both parties to the litigation agreed they wanted it dead — and an appellate court obliged.
What Happened to SAVE Borrowers’ Loan Forgiveness Progress
Millions of borrowers enrolled in SAVE were counting months toward loan forgiveness under IDR plans. The administrative forbearance — which ran from July 2024 through roughly August 2025 — froze those timelines. Months in forbearance did not count toward the 20–25 year IDR forgiveness window or the 10-year PSLF timeline.
Public Service Loan Forgiveness borrowers have one limited remedy. The PSLF Buyback program allows qualifying borrowers to retroactively count certain forbearance months by making retroactive payments after completing 120 qualifying payments. That option exists — but it requires qualifying employment and additional payments, not automatic credit.
For standard IDR borrowers, no buyback mechanism exists. The forbearance months are simply lost. A borrower who entered SAVE in August 2024 with 15 years of prior IDR credit had 13 months of forbearance through August 2025 that will not count. Their forgiveness timeline extended by more than a year through no fault of their own.
What SAVE Borrowers Must Do Now
The Department of Education plans to begin sending transition notices to SAVE enrollees starting July 1, 2026. Borrowers will have 90 days from receipt of their notice to choose an alternative repayment plan. If no action is taken, servicers will auto-enroll borrowers into either the Standard Repayment Plan or the new Tiered Standard Plan — both of which require higher payments than most IDR options.
| Plan | Payment Rate | Forgiveness | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| IBR | 10–15% discretionary income | 20–25 years | Available now — permanent |
| PAYE | 10% discretionary income | 20 years | Available until July 1, 2028 |
| ICR | 20% discretionary income | 25 years | Available until July 1, 2028 |
| RAP | 1–10% adjusted gross income | 30 years | Launches July 1, 2026 |
IBR is the most durable option for borrowers currently close to forgiveness. PAYE still exists and offers lower payments than IBR for most borrowers — but closes July 1, 2028. RAP launches July 1, 2026, and will serve as the primary IDR option going forward, though its 30-year forgiveness timeline is longer than any prior plan. Borrowers pursuing PSLF should confirm with their servicer that their new plan qualifies before switching.
One critical warning: if you don’t act and your servicer auto-enrolls you in the Standard Repayment Plan, your monthly payment will almost certainly be dramatically higher than what you paid under SAVE. That auto-enrollment is not a negotiated transition. It is a default. Choose your plan before the 90-day window closes.
What ED Knew and Didn’t Tell Borrowers
The December 2025 settlement announcement from the Department of Education gave borrowers almost no actionable information. It confirmed SAVE would end. It offered no timeline for servicer notifications. It provided no guidance on which plan borrowers should choose. It gave no indication of what recourse existed if servicer backlogs delayed plan switches — and borrowers already knew backlogs were severe. As of late 2025, nearly half of all federal loan borrowers reported wait times of more than six months to receive responses from servicers on repayment plan applications.
The settlement required borrowers to navigate a broken servicer system, at a moment of peak demand, with virtually no official guidance on where to go or what to do. That is the institutional failure the SAVE litigation leaves behind. Not just the loss of the plan itself — but the loss of the transition infrastructure that should have accompanied it.
The similar to the DOT non-domiciled CDL license battle, where a regulatory reversal left hundreds of thousands of affected workers scrambling without a clear path forward from federal agencies.
The Repayment Assistance Plan — Is It a Fair Replacement?
The OBBBA created RAP as SAVE’s successor. The plans share some DNA. Both calculate payments based on income. Both offer forgiveness for long-term borrowers. The comparisons end there.
SAVE set undergraduate loan payments at 5% of discretionary income. RAP sets payments at 1%–10% of adjusted gross income — a different base calculation that produces different results for most borrowers. SAVE forgave loans after 20 years for most borrowers, 10 years for small balances. RAP requires 30 years of repayment before forgiveness.
SAVE eliminated interest accrual for borrowers making required payments. RAP has no equivalent provision. Interest accrues under RAP regardless of payment amount. A borrower on RAP making income-calibrated payments below their monthly interest charge will still see their balance grow — the same dynamic SAVE was specifically designed to prevent.
For new borrowers taking out federal loans after July 1, 2026, RAP and the Tiered Standard Plan are the only options. For existing borrowers, IBR remains available indefinitely. Borrowers with prior qualifying payment history under SAVE or PAYE will carry that credit into their new plan — they will not start over on forgiveness timelines when they switch.
The Bigger Pattern: Executive Authority and Student Loan Policy
The SAVE litigation sits in a line of cases where administrations have tested the limits of executive authority over federal student loan programs. The Supreme Court blocked the 2022 mass cancellation program in Biden v. Nebraska. SAVE was the administration’s response — a structural IDR redesign instead of direct cancellation. Republican states treated SAVE as the same move wearing different clothes.
What the courts never decided: whether Congress, in authorizing income-contingent repayment plans, implicitly authorized the specific provisions SAVE contained. The Higher Education Act gives the Secretary of Education broad discretion to design IDR plans. The question of how far that discretion extends — and whether SAVE exceeded it — remains legally open. The settlement eliminated the case before any court answered that question on the merits.
The Starbucks labor litigation pattern offers an instructive parallel: when institutions with political and financial resources coordinate litigation strategy, the outcome often has less to do with legal merits than with which side can sustain the fight. Here, Republican AGs and the Trump DOJ found themselves aligned — and used that alignment to engineer an outcome without a trial.
What This Lawsuit Teaches Consumers
The SAVE case teaches something uncomfortable: federal repayment programs that millions of borrowers structure their financial lives around can be eliminated through litigation and political coordination, without a single court ever ruling on whether the program was legal.
More than 7 million borrowers enrolled in SAVE in good faith. They reduced their monthly payments, some to $0. They relied on the non-accruing interest provision to stop their balances from growing. They built budgets around payments that assumed SAVE would remain in place. None of them had any mechanism to challenge the December 2025 settlement between the Trump DOJ and Missouri’s attorney general. They were not parties to that agreement. Their interests were not represented at the table where the decision was made.
The consumer lesson is harder than “read the fine print.” No fine print would have warned a SAVE enrollee in 2023 that a new administration would enter a settlement with hostile AGs to vacate the program before a court ever decided its legality. The lesson is institutional: federal student loan policy is not stable. It shifts with administrations, with litigation strategy, and with appellate court compositions. Borrowers who rely on long-term repayment plans need to watch those plans actively — not just at enrollment, but every time political or legal conditions change around them.
Read These
- Senate lawsuit provision repealed by the House
- Red Bull false advertising lawsuit
- Toyota UA80 transmission defect lawsuit
- Toyota driver data tracking class action
- Homeschool diploma Pennsylvania lawsuit
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the SAVE plan officially dead?
Yes. The Eighth Circuit vacated the SAVE Final Rule on March 10, 2026, after reversing a district court dismissal and directing entry of a December 2025 settlement. SAVE no longer exists as a legal repayment option.
What is the current status of the SAVE plan lawsuit?
Missouri v. Trump is closed. The Eighth Circuit entered final judgment on March 10, 2026. A separate borrower lawsuit filed March 9, 2026 by Public Goods Practice LLP faces long odds given the vacatur.
What happens to borrowers currently enrolled in SAVE?
SAVE borrowers will receive transition notices from loan servicers starting July 1, 2026. They have 90 days to choose a new repayment plan. Inaction results in auto-enrollment in the Standard Repayment Plan.
What repayment plans are available to replace SAVE?
IBR is available now and permanent. PAYE and ICR remain open until July 1, 2028. The new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) launches July 1, 2026. Parent PLUS loan borrowers are excluded from RAP and amended IBR.
Will I lose my loan forgiveness progress if I leave SAVE?
No. Qualifying payment history carries over when you switch plans. However, months spent in administrative forbearance (July 2024–August 2025) do not count toward forgiveness. PSLF borrowers may use the PSLF Buyback program for some of that time.
What is the SAVE plan and why was it created?
SAVE (Saving on a Valuable Education) was an income-driven repayment plan created by the Biden administration in 2023. It set undergraduate loan payments at 5% of discretionary income, eliminated interest accrual for borrowers making required payments, and offered faster forgiveness for small-balance borrowers.
Why did courts block the SAVE plan?
Republican-led states argued SAVE exceeded executive authority by effectively canceling debt through regulatory design — the same legal theory the Supreme Court used to block Biden’s direct cancellation program in 2023. Courts never ruled on the merits; the program was vacated through a settlement.
What is the Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP)?
RAP is a new IDR plan created by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, launching July 1, 2026. Payments range from 1%–10% of adjusted gross income. Forgiveness occurs after 30 years. RAP will be the only income-driven option for new borrowers after July 2026.
Can I stay in PAYE or ICR instead of switching to RAP?
Yes, until July 1, 2028. PAYE and ICR remain open under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act until that date. After 2028, both plans sunset and remaining borrowers auto-transfer to IBR or RAP.
What should SAVE borrowers do right now?
Log into StudentAid.gov and confirm your loan status. Compare IBR, PAYE, and RAP payment estimates using the Loan Simulator. Contact your servicer before July 2026 if possible. Do not wait for auto-enrollment — Standard Plan payments are typically far higher than any IDR option.
Will unpaid interest from forbearance capitalize?
Capitalization rules vary by plan. Under IBR, unpaid interest capitalizes when borrowers leave the plan or miss a payment. Review your specific loan terms and consult your servicer before switching plans to understand your interest capitalization exposure.
What is the difference between the district court dismissal and the 8th Circuit reversal?
U.S. District Judge John Ross dismissed Missouri v. Trump on Feb. 27, 2026 for lack of jurisdiction — no adversarial dispute existed since both parties wanted the same outcome. The Eighth Circuit reversed that on March 10, finding the settlement should be entered as final judgment regardless.
Leave a Reply