Compare your current loan against a refinanced rate. See your monthly savings, total interest savings, and break-even point.
Student loan debt in the United States now exceeds $1.7 trillion, spread across more than 43 million borrowers. For many graduates, student loan payments represent a significant monthly obligation that shapes their ability to save for retirement, purchase a home, or build wealth. The Student Loan Payoff Calculator on Digital.Finance helps borrowers understand the full cost of their loans under different repayment strategies, compare standard and income-driven repayment plans, model the impact of additional monthly payments, and understand the potential financial implications of refinancing. Whether you have $15,000 in undergraduate debt or $180,000 in graduate school loans, knowing your options makes a meaningful difference in your long-term financial outcome.
The calculator takes your total loan balance, interest rate, loan type (federal or private), and current or planned monthly payment to project your payoff date and total interest paid. For borrowers with multiple loans at different rates, it can model the combined repayment schedule. The standard repayment calculation applies the amortization formula to determine the fixed monthly payment that retires the full balance over 10 years — the default term for federal student loans. For a $35,000 loan at 6.5% interest, the standard 10-year monthly payment is approximately $397, with total interest paid of about $12,650. Increasing that payment to $600 per month cuts the payoff time to roughly six years and reduces total interest to about $6,400 — a savings of over $6,000.
Federal student loans offer a range of repayment plan options that provide flexibility unavailable with private loans. The Standard Repayment Plan distributes payments evenly over 10 years and typically results in the lowest total interest. The Graduated Repayment Plan starts with lower payments that increase every two years, designed for borrowers who expect income to rise. Extended Repayment Plans stretch the term to 25 years, lowering monthly payments significantly but greatly increasing total interest paid. Income-Driven Repayment plans — including SAVE, PAYE, IBR, and ICR — calculate payments as a percentage of discretionary income (typically 5% to 20% depending on the plan) and forgive remaining balances after 10 to 25 years. IDR plans can dramatically reduce monthly payments for borrowers in lower-income phases but may result in significant taxable forgiveness at the end of the plan if balances remain.
Public Service Loan Forgiveness, or PSLF, forgives the remaining balance on Direct federal student loans after 120 qualifying monthly payments while working full-time for a qualifying employer — generally government agencies, public schools, and 501(c)(3) nonprofits. Payments must be made under an income-driven repayment plan to qualify. For borrowers with high loan balances working in public service, PSLF can be extraordinarily valuable: a physician, lawyer, or social worker earning a modest nonprofit salary may have $150,000 or more in graduate school debt forgiven tax-free after 10 years of service. Borrowers pursuing PSLF should file annual Employment Certification Forms to confirm ongoing eligibility and maintain accurate records of qualifying payments.
Private refinancing of federal student loans can offer a lower interest rate, particularly for borrowers with strong credit and income, but it permanently converts federal loans to private debt, permanently eliminating access to income-driven repayment, PSLF, federal forbearance, and federal deferment options. This trade-off is significant. For a borrower with $20,000 in low-balance loans who wants to pay off as quickly as possible and is in a stable career with no likelihood of needing income-driven repayment, refinancing to a lower rate makes clear financial sense. For a borrower with high debt relative to income who might benefit from income-driven repayment or PSLF, refinancing to private debt can be a costly mistake. The decision should be evaluated individually, not treated as universally beneficial.
Loan forgiveness under most income-driven repayment plans — outside of PSLF — is treated as taxable income in the year it is received, a provision sometimes called the "tax bomb." If you have $80,000 forgiven under a 20-year repayment plan, that $80,000 is added to your taxable income in that year, potentially creating a large tax bill. Under PSLF, forgiven amounts are tax-free. American Rescue Plan Act provisions through 2025 also excluded forgiveness from federal income tax in certain circumstances, but this provision is temporary. Borrowers relying on income-driven repayment forgiveness should be aware of the potential tax liability and ideally invest in a dedicated savings vehicle during the repayment period to cover the eventual tax bill.
The answer depends primarily on the interest rate. Federal student loans for undergraduates in recent years have carried rates between 4.99% and 7.05%. For balances below approximately 6% to 7%, contributing to a 401(k) to capture the employer match first, then maintaining standard loan payments while investing additional savings, is often the more financially optimal choice. For loans at 7% or above, paying them down more aggressively before heavy investment is defensible. Graduate and professional school loans can carry rates of 7% to 8.05% — at those levels, accelerated payoff competes more closely with investment returns.
Capitalized interest occurs when unpaid interest is added to the principal balance of a loan, increasing the amount on which future interest is calculated. This most commonly happens when you exit deferment or forbearance, when you fail to pay the accruing interest on an income-driven repayment plan where payments are lower than interest charges, or when you consolidate loans with unpaid interest. Capitalizing $3,000 in unpaid interest on a $40,000 loan at 6.5% increases the balance to $43,000 and adds approximately $195 in additional interest per year — compounding over the remaining loan life.
The student loan interest deduction allows eligible borrowers to deduct up to $2,500 in student loan interest paid annually from their federal taxable income. For 2024, the deduction phases out for single filers with modified adjusted gross income between $75,000 and $90,000, and for joint filers between $155,000 and $185,000. The deduction is taken above the line, meaning you do not need to itemize to claim it. At a 22% marginal rate, the maximum deduction of $2,500 saves $550 in federal income tax — a meaningful but not transformative benefit for most borrowers.