• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Navigating Money And Education

  • About
  • Podcasts
  • Social
  • Newsletter
  • Save For College
  • Student Loans
  • Investing
  • Earn More Money
  • Banking
  • Taxes
  • Forum
  • Search
Home / News / Borrowers File Long-Shot Legal Bid To Reverse SAVE Ruling

Borrowers File Long-Shot Legal Bid To Reverse SAVE Ruling

Updated: March 13, 2026 By Robert Farrington | < 1 Min Read Leave a Comment

Many or all of the products featured here may be from our partners who compensate us. This doesn't influence our evaluations or reviews. Our opinions are our own. Investing information is for educational purposes only. Learn more here.Advertiser Disclosure

There are thousands of financial products and services out there, and we believe in helping you understand which is best for you, how it works, and will it actually help you achieve your financial goals. We're proud of our content and guidance, and the information we provide is objective, independent, and free.

But we do have to make money to pay our team and keep this website running! Our partners compensate us. TheCollegeInvestor.com has an advertising relationship with some or all of the offers included on this page, which may impact how, where, and in what order products and services may appear. The College Investor does not include all companies or offers available in the marketplace. And our partners can never pay us to guarantee favorable reviews (or even pay for a review of their product to begin with).

For more information and a complete list of our advertising partners, please check out our full Advertising Disclosure. TheCollegeInvestor.com strives to keep its information accurate and up to date. The information in our reviews could be different from what you find when visiting a financial institution, service provider or a specific product's website. All products and services are presented without warranty.

Capitol building in Washington. The United States Senate and House of Representatives. Source: The College Investor

Key Points

  • A group of student loan borrowers filed a motion today asking a federal court to reverse its March 10 order that officially killed the SAVE repayment plan — arguing that vacating the SAVE Final Rule was improper.
  • The motion raises three legal arguments, including that Congress effectively ratified SAVE when it passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act in July 2025 without eliminating the plan.
  • The motion is unlikely to succeed, as both the Trump Administration and the plaintiff states want the SAVE plan eliminated, and the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals already directed the outcome.

Three days after a federal court officially killed the SAVE student loan repayment plan, a group of borrowers is asking that same court to reverse their ruling. While they have some legal arguments to make it interesting, the odds are stacked against them.

Attorney William Austin Hinkle, representing the same group of borrowers that was suing the Department of Education in another court, filed a motion for reconsideration (PDF File) on March 13, 2026. The filing argues that the court's March 10 order vacating the SAVE Final Rule was a "manifest error of law" that should be reversed and that the only legally permissible outcome is to send the case back without permanently erasing the rule.

It's a legally creative argument with some merit. But the practical path to success is extremely narrow.

Would you like to save this?

We'll email this article to you, so you can come back to it later!

How The SAVE Plan Was Eliminated And Why The Process Matters

The SAVE plan (formally the Saving on a Valuable Education plan) was the Biden administration's signature income-driven repayment program. At its peak, more than 7 million borrowers were enrolled. The plan was challenged by a coalition of Republican-led states shortly after it took effect in 2023, and courts blocked key provisions while the litigation played out.

What makes this filing unusual is what happened at the end: SAVE wasn't killed by a court ruling on the merits. It was killed by a deal.

Missouri (the lead plaintiff state) and the Trump administration's Department of Education (which was supposed to be defending the rule) jointly agreed they both wanted it gone.

The Eighth Circuit, in a two-sentence order issued March 9, directed the district court to enter judgment "as jointly requested by the parties." The district court complied the next day. No court ever ruled the SAVE Final Rule was actually illegal. No trial was held. No balancing of equities was conducted.

That procedural reality is the foundation of this motion.

What Arguments Are These Borrowers Making

The borrowers are arguing three legal theories, any one of which they argue would be enough to reverse the vacatur of the SAVE rule.

First, when lawmakers passed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, they knew the SAVE plan existed as a part of the ICR regulations, and explicitly chose to keep those income-contingent repayment plans alive through July 1, 2028.

The intervenors argue this constitutes congressional ratification. Congress amended the very statute underlying SAVE and still chose not to eliminate the plan immediately. You cannot simultaneously argue a rule exceeded congressional authority and ignore the fact that Congress just preserved that authority.

The second argument targets the mechanics of what happened. Under the Administrative Procedure Act, courts can only vacate agency rules when they make an affirmative finding that the rule is unlawful.

A settlement between two parties is not a finding of illegality. The intervenors cite a 2023 Ninth Circuit ruling involving Clean Water Act regulations (PDF File) that held courts cannot permanently extinguish a federal rule simply because both parties request it. Agreement is not adjudication on the legality of a rule.

The third argument is about a required legal test that was skipped entirely. Before vacating a major regulation, courts are supposed to weigh how serious the rule's deficiencies are against how disruptive elimination would be. The SAVE Final Rule was 86 pages of detailed regulatory analysis built on the negotiated rulemaking process and nearly 14,000 public comments. It was eliminated in a two-sentence directive with no analysis at all. 

That failure, the motion argues, is itself reversible error.

Why This Is Still A Long Shot

The legal arguments may have some merit. The OBBBA ratification theory in particular is something that no court has addressed, and the district court itself previously noted it was "not persuaded" by attempts to ignore the law's implications when it denied Missouri's request for a stay of an earlier dismissal.

But the practical obstacles are going to be hard to overcome.

First, the court has to allow these borrowers to intervene - and they have not yet been granted that right. The court could decline to hear the motion entirely on that basis.

Even if it does allow the intervention, the district court that just followed the Eighth Circuit's mandate three days ago is unlikely to reverse course based on a filing by parties who were not formally in the case. And if the district court did act, the Eighth Circuit (which directed this outcome) would almost certainly reverse it.

These borrowers could continue to appeal, but it's unlikely that the Supreme Court would intervene - and even if it did, it likely wouldn't happen for a significant period of time. 

The motion reads more as an attempt to build a legal record, rather than as a realistic way to revive SAVE broadly.

What's Going To Happen Next?

It's important to realize that, in the immediate term, nothing is changing for borrowers. While the SAVE plan is still dead, borrowers need to await actual logistical communication from the Department of Education.

This new motion likely won't lead anywhere, but even if it does, it's unlikely borrowers won't notice any difference immediately as a result. 

Borrowers should continue to check their loan accounts, ensure their contact information is updated, and make decisions to leave the SAVE forbearance based on their own financial situation.

Don't Miss These Other Stories:

GAO: FSA Halted Student Loan Servicer Reviews

GAO: FSA Halted Student Loan Servicer Reviews

SAVE Student Loan Plan Officially Ended By Court Order

SAVE Student Loan Plan Officially Ended By Court Order

AI Still Falls Short On Student Loan Forgiveness

AI Still Falls Short On Student Loan Forgiveness

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.

Please Share And Support

  • Facebook
  • X
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit
  • Flipboard
  • Bluesky
  • Print
  • Email
Editorial Disclaimer: Opinions expressed here are author’s alone, not those of any bank, credit card issuer, airlines or hotel chain, or other advertiser and have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any of these entities.
Comment Policy: We invite readers to respond with questions or comments. Comments may be held for moderation and are subject to approval. Comments are solely the opinions of their authors'. The responses in the comments below are not provided or commissioned by any advertiser. Responses have not been reviewed, approved or otherwise endorsed by any company. It is not anyone's responsibility to ensure all posts and/or questions are answered.
Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted

Primary Sidebar

Student Loan Resources
Add The College Investor as a Preferred Source on Google

Featured Lender Reviews

>  Credible (recommended)
>  Juno (recommended)
>  Ascent (recommended)
>  ELFI
>  College Ave
>  Earnest
>  Sallie Mae

Paying For College

  • Best Student Loans And Rates
  • Best Private Student Loans
  • Student Loan And Financial Aid Programs By State
  • Student Loans For Community College
  • Best International Student Loans
  • Best Student Loans For Graduate School
  • Best Student Loans For Your MBA
  • Best Student Loans For Medical School
  • Best No-Cosigner Private Student Loans Of 2026
  • How To Get A Student Loan With Bad Credit Or No Credit

Navigating Repayment

  • Best Student Loan Repayment Plans (Updated For OBBBA)
  • 5 Legal Ways To Lower Your Student Loan Payment
  • Can You Use A 529 Plan To Pay Student Loans?
  • Student Loan Repayment Assistance: Employers Offering SLRA

Student Loan Forgiveness

  • How To Get Student Loan Forgiveness [Full Program List]
  • Student Loan Forgiveness Programs By State
  • Public Service Loan Forgiveness
  • For-Profit College Student Loan Forgiveness List
  • Private Student Loan Forgiveness
  • Trade School Loan Forgiveness Programs

Student Loan Refinance

  • Best Student Loan Refinance Companies
  • Best Student Loan Refinancing Bonuses And Promotional Offers
  • Lenders That Offer Student Loan Refinancing Without A Degree
  • How To Refinance An International Student Loan
  • Best Medical School Student Loan Refinance Lenders

More On Student Loans

  • Student Loan Debt Statistics
  • Top Student Loan Scams (2026): Spot & Avoid Red Flags
  • Does The Government Profit Off Of Student Loans?
  • What Should You Do With Your Old FFELP Loans?
  • How To Get A Refund Of Your Federal Student Loan Payments

Footer

Who We Are

The College Investor® provides the latest news and analysis for saving and paying for college, student loan debt, personal finance, banking, and college admissions.

Connect

  • Social
  • Contact
  • Newsletter
  • Advertise
  • Press & Media
  • Helpful Calculators

About

  • About
  • In The News
  • Research
  • Editorial Guidelines
  • How We Make Money
  • Archives

Social

Copyright © 2026 · The College Investor® · 2514 Jamacha Rd, Ste 502, El Cajon, CA 92019

Privacy Policy ·Terms of Service · DO NOT Sell My Personal Information

wpDiscuz