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 from your annual income. The result is your discretionary income.
Step 6: Calculate Monthly Payments Most plans use 10% of your discretionary income as your annual payment amount (ICR uses 20%). Divide by 12 to get your monthly obligation.
Comparing Income-Driven Repayment Plans and Their Calculations
Different income-driven plans produce different results when you calculate discretionary income. Here’s how each approach works:
Income-Based Repayment (IBR): Your monthly payment equals 10% of the amount remaining after you subtract 150% of the poverty guideline from your income. For loans taken after July 1, 2014, this payment won’t exceed what you’d pay under a standard 10-year plan.
Pay As You Earn (PAYE): Like IBR, PAYE uses the 150% poverty guideline threshold and charges 10% of discretionary income. This plan also caps your payment at the 10-year standard amount.
Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE): This plan calculates discretionary income using the same 150% guideline and 10% payment structure as PAYE, but without the payment cap tied to the standard plan.
Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR): ICR takes the most aggressive approach, using only 100% of the poverty guideline (not 150%). Your payment is either 20% of discretionary income or a fixed payment based on a 12-year repayment term, whichever is lower.
The differences might seem subtle, but they significantly impact what you’ll actually pay each month.
Real-World Calculation Examples: What You’ll Actually Pay
Let’s apply these concepts to a realistic scenario. Imagine a borrower with $30,000 in federal student loans at 4.53% interest, earning $35,000 annually, married with one child, living in the continental United States.
Under a Standard 10-Year Plan: Without any income-driven considerations, the monthly payment would be approximately $311. Your discretionary income doesn’t factor into this fixed amount at all.
Using IBR, PAYE, or REPAYE: With a household size of three, the poverty guideline is $21,720. At 150%, that equals $32,580. Subtracting from the $35,000 income leaves $2,420 in discretionary income. Taking 10% of that ($242) and dividing by 12 gives a monthly payment of just $20.17—a reduction of over 93%.
Using ICR: ICR uses the full $21,720 guideline (100%, not 150%). Subtracting from $35,000 yields $13,280 in discretionary income. Twenty percent of that is $2,656 annually, or $221.33 monthly. While higher than IBR/PAYE/REPAYE, it’s still nearly 30% less than the standard plan.
These examples show why understanding how to calculate discretionary income matters for your wallet.
Why Discretionary Income Matters: Disposable vs. Discretionary
People often confuse discretionary income with disposable income, but they’re fundamentally different.
Disposable income is what remains after you pay federal, state, and local taxes. You use it to cover both necessities (housing, groceries) and luxuries (dining out, entertainment).
Discretionary income for student loans is narrower: it’s only the money beyond what you need for basic survival. The federal government essentially asks, “After taxes and basic living costs, how much extra do you really have?” That “extra” is what could theoretically go toward loan payments.
For income-driven repayment calculations, discretionary income is specifically measured against the poverty guideline—creating a standardized definition rather than relying on your personal budget.
When IDR Plans Don’t Work: Alternative Repayment Strategies
Not everyone qualifies for income-driven repayment. If your income is too high or your loan type doesn’t fit, other federal options exist:
Graduated Repayment: Your 10-year repayment term starts with lower payments that increase every two years (up to 30 years for consolidated loans). Income doesn’t affect your payment structure—only time does.
Extended Repayment: This stretches your repayment over 25 years with either fixed or gradually increasing payments. Your discretionary income plays no role; instead, longevity reduces each individual payment.
Standard Repayment: The traditional 10-year fixed plan works for borrowers whose income qualifies them for substantial payments, or those who prefer certainty over flexibility.
You can use the Federal Student Aid Loan Simulator tool to compare scenarios and identify which plan best matches your financial situation. Understanding how to calculate discretionary income helps you make an informed choice about whether income-driven plans truly benefit you—or whether a simpler plan serves your needs better.