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Home / Student Loans / Private Student Loans / Income-Based Repayment Comes To Private Student Loans

Income-Based Repayment Comes To Private Student Loans

Updated: February 10, 2026 By Robert Farrington | < 1 Min Read Leave a Comment

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Close-up of a businessman in a gray suit holding a pen while explaining a contract to a client at a wooden table. This image illustrates the consultation process for refinancing private student loans, specifically highlighting the new option of income-based repayment plans offered by lenders like RISLA. Source: The College Investor

Key Points

  • A nonprofit lender, Rhode Island Student Loan Authority (RISLA), is offering income-based repayment on refinanced private student loans, a structure long limited to federal loans.
  • The plan mirrors the "old" IBR formula: payments capped at 15% of discretionary income, with forgiveness after 25 years.
  • The approach may reduce default risk for lenders, but it can raise total borrowing costs for consumers over time.

For years, income-driven repayment has been a dividing line between federal and private student loans. Federal borrowers could tie monthly payments to income but historically, private borrowers could not.

That line is starting to blur.

RISLA (Rhode Island Student Loan Authority), a nonprofit student loan lender based in Rhode Island, has introduced an income-based repayment (IBR) option for borrowers who refinance student loans through the organization. The plan borrows heavily from the "old" IBR framework created in 2009, offering payment flexibility during periods of lower income and forgiveness after decades of repayment.

It is a small but notable shift in a private lending market that has traditionally emphasized fixed monthly payments and faster payoff schedules. As federal student loan policies continue to change, the question is whether other lenders will follow and whether borrowers should welcome them if they do.

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How RISLA's Income Based Repayment Works

Under RISLA’s IBR program, borrowers who refinance their student loans can cap their monthly payment at 15% of discretionary income. That payment will never exceed what the borrower would owe under a standard repayment plan, and the minimum payment is $10 per month.

However, if there is a cosigner on the loan, it appears that both incomes (borrower and cosigner) will be used to calculate the payment amount.

Interest continues to accrue during IBR periods, but there is an important guardrail: unpaid interest does not capitalize (meaning it does not get added to the loan balance) until the borrower reaches the end of the IBR repayment period.

Borrowers who remain in the program for 25 years of qualifying payments can receive forgiveness on any remaining balance. Periods of forbearance or deferment do not count toward that total unless the borrower is actively making IBR payments.

RISLA also says borrowers who enroll in IBR remain eligible for its profession-based loan forgiveness programs, including Nursing Rewards and Internship Forgiveness. That combination is unusual in the private market, as most other private lenders don't offer "forgiveness" programs. 

Why Private Lenders Are Experimenting Now

Private lenders have long avoided income-based repayment because of its uncertainty. Fixed payments make loans easier to price, easier to securitize, and easier to explain to investors.

But the student loan market has changed. Rising balances, uneven wage growth, and the normalization of income-driven repayment in the federal system have reshaped borrower expectations. Many borrowers now see payment flexibility as a baseline feature, not a luxury.

From a lender’s perspective, IBR can serve as a risk-management tool. A borrower who can reduce payments during a job loss or income dip may be less likely to default altogether. Lower default rates can offset the cost of longer repayment periods and potential forgiveness.

RISLA’s nonprofit status may also make the math easier. The organization does not answer to shareholders in the same way large for-profit lenders do, giving it more room to prioritize borrower stability over short-term returns.

What Does The Math Look Like?

Income-based repayment lowers monthly payments, but it almost always raises the total amount paid over time. Time is a huge factor in student loan repayment.

Consider a simplified example:

  • Loan balance: $60,000
  • Interest rate: 6%
  • Borrower discretionary income: $50,000

Standard repayment (15 years):
A borrower on a 15-year fixed plan would pay roughly $505 per month. Over 15 years, total payments would come to about $91,000, with the loan paid off in full. Shorter repayment plans repay even less due to less interest accruing. 

Income-based repayment (25 years):
At 15% of discretionary income, the monthly payment would be about $343 per month initially, but payments could rise over time (in fact, the lender is betting on it). Over 25 years, the borrower could easily pay $100,000 in total, depending on income growth, before any remaining balance is forgiven.

It's also important to realize that forgiven balances are taxable - and would be subject to the student loan tax bomb.

The borrower does benefit from flexibility and protection against unaffordable payments. The lender benefits from extended interest collection and lower default risk. The tradeoff is time.

What This Means For Borrowers

For borrowers with volatile incomes (early-career professionals, gig workers, or those entering lower-paying public service roles) private IBR could reduce financial strain without forcing them back into the federal system.

However, those with volatile incomes may find it difficult to be approved for a refinance into an IBR program. There are multiple student loan refinance lenders, and they all have different underwriting criteria. if there's repayment risk, they may not offer IBR anyway.

Refinancing into a private student loan with this IBR plan also means giving up federal protections such as Public Service Loan Forgiveness and any future federally mandated payment pauses. 

It is too early to call this a trend, but RISLA’s move will be closely watched. If default rates fall and borrower satisfaction rises, other lenders may test similar options, possibly with stricter eligibility rules or higher interest rates to offset the risk.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is income-based repayment and how is it being applied to private student loans for the first time?

Income-based repayment bases your monthly loan payment as a percentage of your income. That has traditionally been reserved for federal student loans, but RISLA is introducing it to private student loans.

How does RISLA’s new income-based repayment option for private student loans work?

RISLA's new income-based repayment option would cap your student loan payment at 15% of your discretionary income.

What makes income-based repayment for private student loans different from federal income-driven repayment plans?

There are some variations between federal IDR plans and RISLA's. For example, RISLA uses 15% of discretionary income, while new IBR uses 10%, and RAP uses adjusted gross income.

What are the potential benefits and risks for borrowers using income-based repayment on private student loans?

The big benefit of income based repayment is that monthly student loan payments could be lower and capped as a percentage of your income. The downside is that total repayment could be more over time, simply due to extending the repayment period.

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Editor: Colin Graves

Robert Farrington
Robert Farrington

Robert Farrington is the founder of The College Investor and is widely recognized as one of the nation’s leading voices on student loan debt and saving for college. He holds an MBA from UC San Diego Rady School of Management and has spent over 15 years researching, writing, and advising on student loans, 529 plans, financial aid programs, and saving and investing for young professionals.

Robert has been featured in the The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, NBC News, and Forbes, where he has been a regular personal finance contributor for over a decade. His work combines both professional expertise and personal experience – he successfully navigated his own student loan repayment journey and has helped thousands of readers do the same.

He is committed to making the intersection of personal finance and education transparent and accessible. You can learn more about Robert on the About Page or on his personal site RobertFarrington.com.

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