For millions of Americans carrying student debt, a small checkbox on a loan servicer’s website could soon be worth a lot more money.
The U.S. Department of Education announced that federal student loan borrowers who sign up for automatic payments will be eligible for a temporary 1 percentage point reduction in their interest rate beginning July 1 (1).
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That’s a significant jump from the long-standing 0.25 percentage point discount borrowers have traditionally received for enrolling in autopay. But there’s a catch because borrowers have until only Sept. 30, 2026, to enroll in order to lock in the enhanced rate reduction, which is scheduled to remain in effect through June 30, 2028.
For borrowers who are already feeling squeezed by student loan payments, it’s one of the more tangible benefits to emerge as the federal repayment system undergoes yet another overhaul.
Who qualifies for it?
The interest rate reduction applies to eligible federal direct loans first disbursed on or after July 1, 2012. Borrowers who are already enrolled in autopay don’t need to take any action.
According to the Department, they’ll automatically receive the additional 0.75 percentage point reduction beginning July 1, bringing their total discount to a full percentage point.
Borrowers who are in default won’t qualify unless they first return their loans to good standing. Meanwhile, borrowers who were enrolled in the now-defunct SAVE repayment plan may need to transition into another active repayment option before they can benefit from the lower rate.
And the timing isn’t accidental. The federal student loan portfolio now tops $1.7 trillion and is held by roughly 43 million borrowers, according to the latest data from the Education Data Initiative (2).
Before the pandemic-era payment pause, more than 80% of borrowers used autopay. Today, that figure has fallen to about 40%, while millions of borrowers are either delinquent or already in default. The Department has framed the richer discount as a way to encourage borrowers to resume regular repayment habits and avoid falling further behind.
The announcement also arrives ahead of broader repayment changes scheduled to take effect this summer, including the rollout of new repayment options and the phaseout of some existing plans.
A 1 percentage point reduction may not sound dramatic, but over time it can translate into meaningful savings.
Imagine a borrower with $30,000 in federal student loans carrying a 6.5% interest rate. Dropping that rate to 5.5% could mean paying several hundred dollars less in interest over a two-year period, depending on the repayment term and monthly payment amount.
And rates today aren’t exactly low. Federal student loan rates remain relatively elevated by recent historical standards.
Undergraduate direct loans first disbursed between July 1, 2026, and June 30, 2027, carry a fixed rate of 6.52%, while graduate loans are set at 8.07% and PLUS loans at 9.07% (3). For borrowers whose loans qualify for the enhanced autopay benefit, shaving a full percentage point off their existing rate won’t erase the cost of borrowing, but it can noticeably reduce the amount of interest that accrues over time.
Of course, autopay isn’t ideal for everyone. Some borrowers may prefer to manually schedule payments to maintain tighter control over cash flow, especially if their income fluctuates from month to month. Others could be wary after servicing transfers and administrative hiccups during the restart of federal student loan payments.
Still, for borrowers who expect to be making payments over the next two years and are comfortable enrolling in autopay, the math is fairly straightforward. Paying a lower interest rate means a larger share of each payment goes toward reducing the loan balance, rather than covering interest charges.
At a time when many borrowers are navigating changing repayment options and trying to keep up with shifting student loan policies, this is one of the few recent changes that offers a clear, easy-to-calculate benefit — provided they sign up before the Sept. 30, 2026 deadline.
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U.S. Department of Education (1); Education Data (2); U.S. Department of Education (3)