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    Home»Daily Bread»Is Payroll Ever Cheaper Than Student Loan Repayment?
    Daily Bread

    Is Payroll Ever Cheaper Than Student Loan Repayment?

    adminBy adminMay 30, 2026Updated:May 30, 2026No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
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    Is Payroll Ever Cheaper Than Student Loan Repayment?
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    Short answer: no. For almost every federal student loan borrower, the cost of wage garnishment and the remaining default collection process will exceed the lowest-payoff repayment plan for which they qualify. There is one structurally interesting exception, but it also comes with consequences that ruin any savings.

    Still, the question is asked – usually by borrowers who feel cornered, view $0 IBR payments as suspicious, or assume a default is “free” until collectors find them. Here’s how the math really works.

    What Student Loan Default Collection Really Takes From You

    Once a federal student loan defaults, the Department of Education has three main tools:

    • Administrative Wage Garnishment (AWG): Up to 15% of disposable pay, after a protected amount equal to 30 times the federal minimum wage per week (approximately $290/week).
    • Treasury Offset Program: Confiscates federal tax refunds, certain federal benefits, and (for many borrowers) state tax refunds.
    • Social Security Offset: Up to 15% profit with $750/month protected floor. It restarted under current Treasury enforcement after a pause.

    The federal wage offset may also apply to government employees.

    Storage fees also reached 20% of the balance, and the interest continues to increase. The result is that the money that is “taken” from you rarely goes toward your student loan balance. You are effectively stuck in a “death cycle” of borrowing money without any benefit or even increasing debt balance.

    If a borrower has no W-2 wages, no tax refunds, no Social Security checks, and no federal pay checks, default collections could technically take up $0 in a given year. This is where the question “Is the default cheap?” The question begins.

    What is the cost of student loan repayment

    The two relevant comparison points right now are RAP (New Repayment Assistance Scheme) and IBR.

    • to knock There is a minimum payment of $10/month regardless of income. It scales up to 10% of AGI at higher incomes, and because it is AGI-based, it captures self-employment income, rental income, capital gains, and K-1 distributions.
    • ibr Calculates payments based on discretionary income (AGI minus 150% of the federal poverty line). If discretionary income is zero or negative, the payment is $0. Otherwise it is 10% or 15% of discretionary income depending on the IBR group of the borrower.

    For low-income borrowers, IBR can make virtual $0 monthly payments with no minimums. But generally, the 10% of your AGI or discretionary income with your tax refund offset will be less than the 15% taken from you during AWG.

    When default math “looks better” but really doesn’t

    There are some cases where the raw monthly cost of default is less than the RAP:

    1. A borrower who has neither a modest salary nor any tax refund. AWG = $0. Treasury offset = $0. RAP still wants $10/month. IBR is at $0. But in this case, $0 is better than IBR decoration.
    2. A borrower whose W-2 disposable wages fall under 30x minimum wage protection. AWG can’t touch it. RAP still wants $10/month. IBR is $0. Again, $0 IBR is better.
    3. A self-employed borrower who manages estimated taxes accurately. No refunds to seize, no W-2s to garnish. By default it takes very little time. However, if the government gets wind of it, there are still other methods, such as charging your bank accounts.

    Actual pay cuts are not the only concern

    Cash flow (or less cash flow due to AWG) isn’t the only cost. Default carries:

    • Storage charges (up to 20%) and interest capitalization.
    • Loss of all forgiveness credits – Default time does not count for PSLF or time-based loan forgiveness.
    • Credit damage that increases the price of rentals, car loans, car insurance, utility deposits and even bank account approvals.
    • Loss of access to further federal student aid.
    • Occupational license risks in some states.
    • Treasury offsets access items borrowers forget about such as state refunds, certain federal benefits.

    Current enforcement is also more aggressive than the pre-2020 baseline. Social Security offsets are back.

    The key to remember is that your entire financial life is more expensive as a result of default. So while you may not want to consider AWG, you will still face higher costs elsewhere.

    ground level

    In terms of net monthly cash flow, default may seem cheap to borrowers, with no attractive salaries and no tax refunds. Once collection costs and fees, time lost to loan forgiveness, and the price of damaged credit are added up, IBR at $0 wins in the low-income scenario, and RAP or IBR beats default for anyone with meaningful AGI.

    The default is no repayment strategy. This is an expensive penalty box.

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