Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 17
States Expand Graduate Loan Programs as G.O.P. Bill Ends Graduate PLUS for New Borrowers
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jul 17

States Expand Graduate Loan Programs as G.O.P. Bill Ends Graduate PLUS for New Borrowers

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jul 17

Summary

  • Minnesota and Connecticut expanded state student loan programs from July 1 to help graduate students cover funding gaps left by the end of federal Graduate PLUS loans for new borrowers.
  • Graduate students who exhaust federal Stafford loans—generally capped at $20,500 a year and $138,500 total—previously used Graduate PLUS to borrow up to a school’s full cost of attendance.
  • Without state options, many students would have to turn to private lenders, whose loans typically lack federal protections such as income-based repayment, payment pauses during hardship and some public-service cancellation benefits.
  • State loans are not automatic substitutes for federal debt, though, because each program sets its own terms and may not match federal borrower safeguards.
  • Graduate PLUS borrowers made up just 16% of graduate students in 2023 but accounted for nearly one-third of federal graduate lending, especially in costly fields such as law and health care.

Insights

With federal loans now capped, are new state-run programs a safe alternative or a riskier path for graduate students?
Will capping federal graduate loans actually lower tuition costs or just ignite a new private debt crisis?
As new loan limits hit fields like nursing, could America’s student debt solution create a critical workforce shortage?