Sunday, December 21, 2025

‘I’m bracing for an astronomical bill’

College graduate
Student-loan borrowers said they’re worried about higher payments without the SAVE plan.Aaron Hawkins/Getty Images/iStockphoto
  • Trump announced a proposed settlement to officially end the SAVE student-loan repayment plan.

  • Borrowers said that they’re bracing for much higher monthly student-loan payments.

  • With high costs of living, some borrowers said budgeting for a higher payment is not feasible.

David Chatman, 51, is filing for bankruptcy.

One reason? His monthly student loan payments are projected to jump from $86 to $689 now that President Donald Trump has moved to end the income-driven repayment plan Chatman was on.

The SAVE plan, created under former President Joe Biden, was intended to provide borrowers with cheaper monthly payments and a shorter timeline to debt relief. In early December, President Donald Trump’s administration announced a proposed settlement to officially eliminate the plan.

“I’ve never been behind on a credit card payment. I’ve never missed a student loan payment. But now it’s come to the point where life just isn’t feasible like that,” Chatman told Business Insider. He described his decision to pursue bankruptcy as “the lesser of all the evils out there.”

The fate of the SAVE plan has been uncertain for over a year. After a group of GOP-led states filed a lawsuit to block the plan, over 7 million enrolled borrowers were placed on forbearance in the summer of 2024. Trump’s Department of Education restarted interest charges on SAVE accounts in August, and if a court approves the department’s proposed settlement, enrolled borrowers will have a limited period to enroll in a different repayment plan, likely facing higher monthly payments.

Nicholas Kent, the undersecretary of education, said in a statement on the proposed SAVE settlement that “if you take out a loan, you must pay it back.”

“American taxpayers can now rest assured they will no longer be forced to serve as collateral for illegal and irresponsible student loan policies,” Kent said.

Chatman doesn’t see it that way. He has consistently made monthly payments since 2015, when he graduated from Oregon State University with a bachelor’s degree in microbiology with $63,000 in student-debt. Now, however, he doesn’t have hundreds of extra dollars to keep that up without the SAVE plan while earning an hourly wage at a car dealership. Bankruptcy would allow him to clear some of his debt and move forward financially.

“When I saw that my payment was going to be this much more, I just sat there and looked at it,” Chatman said. “There’s no way. There’s no way.”

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