According to one, high school seniors attending public four-year colleges this fall could graduate with more than $43,000 in student loan debt. New NerdWallet analysis Data from the National Center for Education Statistics.
why it matters: The launch lands just as changes to the federal repayment plan on July 1 ended, the SAVE plan ended, and the push of AI on entry-level jobs is leading more students to question whether a bachelor’s degree is still over.
Big Number: According to NerdWallet, a student enrolling at an in-state public university in 2026 and taking five years to earn a bachelor’s degree can borrow an estimated $43,500 to cover the costs. The five-year timeline reflects reality, with the Fall 2019 cohort’s five-year completion rate being just 57%, according to the National Student Clearinghouse.
It is also important to know that one in three students who start college do not finish college.
by numbers
- 46% of 2026 high school graduates plan to attend a four-year college.
- 35% of those enrolling at a public four-year university will incur student loan debt.
- $31,000 is the federal borrowing limit for dependent undergraduate students, which means that more than $12,000 of the estimated $43,500 must come from private loans, parent borrowing, scholarships or cash.
How Americans feel about college: A NerdWallet/Harris Poll survey conducted March 3-5, 2026 found:
- 65% still believe that a four-year degree is generally a smart financial move.
- 78% say the federal student loan system is broken.
- 69% say college is no longer as important to making a good living as it used to be.
- 77% say trades jobs are more secure than office jobs.
Change in Repayment Plan: Federal loans disbursed on or after July 1, 2026, will have access to only two repayment options: a new tiered standard plan lasting 10 to 25 years, and the Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP), which caps monthly payments at 1-10% of adjusted gross income with a minimum of $10 and forgives the remaining balance after 30 years.
Under the 15-year Tiered Standard plan at the current 6.39% rate, a borrower who takes out the maximum amount of $31,000 in an unsubsidized loan would pay about $28,266 in interest and make $329 monthly payments, according to NerdWallet’s math. Paying an extra $100 per month will shave five years off payments and save nearly $8,000 in interest.
Make sure you run College Investor’s “How Much Student Loan Debt Can You Afford Calculator” so you can see the impact of borrowing on your repayments after you graduate.
How it connects: NerdWallet’s estimate of $43,500 sits well above where recent graduates have landed. College Investor’s own data shows that the average undergraduate student in 2024 was $38,650 in loan debt, and the average student loan balance for all borrowers in 2025 is $39,375. Today approximately 43 million Americans have student loan debt.
This makes the Class of 2026 a useful stress test: New repayment rules, a changing job market, and AI pressure on white-collar roles mean the debt-to-earnings math is becoming harder to justify.
Students who utilize scholarships, grants, and in-state tuition options before taking out student loans will have meaningfully better repayments than those who borrow up to the limit or more.
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