📅 August tuition bills are coming. Use this toolkit to build your borrowing plan now — before the due date.
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2026–2027 Parent PLUS Loan Change: New borrowers are now capped at $20,000/year and $65,000 lifetime per student under the One Big Beautiful Act (rate: 8.94%, fee: 4.228%). If your gap exceeds these limits, private loans may cost you less. Scroll down for our step-by-step guide.

📚 2026 Undergrad Borrowing Guide — Updated for August Bills

Your college bill is due.
Here's exactly how to pay it.

This free toolkit gives parents and students a clear, step-by-step framework for covering tuition — from federal loans to private lenders — so you borrow smart and don't leave money on the table.

50,000+ families guided
2026 rates & rules updated
✅ Start Here

How Families Actually Pay the College Bill

Before you borrow anything, understand all the tools available to you. Most families use a combination of these — the order matters.

1

Grants & Scholarships

Free money — never needs to be repaid. Always apply first, every year.

Use First
2

529 Savings Plans

Tax-advantaged education savings. Timing your withdrawals matters — see the 529 section below.

3

Federal Student Loans

Fixed rates, no credit check, federal repayment protections. The first loan every student should take.

Borrow Second
4

College Payment Plans

Monthly installments direct to the school. Usually fee-based but interest-free — often overlooked.

5

Private / State Loans

Credit-based. Can offer lower rates than Parent PLUS for strong-credit families. Shop multiple lenders.

6

Parent PLUS Loans

Federal program in parent's name. Note the new 2026 caps and high origination fees before committing.

New 2026 Caps
The key insight most families miss: This is a four-year financial plan — not a one-year decision. What you borrow in Year 1 shapes your options in Years 2, 3, and 4. The families who handle it best build a strategy across all four years upfront.
⚡ Your Action Plan

CAP's Step-by-Step Borrowing Guide for 2026

Follow these steps in order. Each one builds on the last. By the end, you'll have real rate offers in hand and a clear decision to make.

Why this order matters: Soft credit pulls (steps 1–2) let you shop without hurting your credit score. Only do hard pulls (step 3) after you've seen soft-pull rates. Then compare everything side by side before choosing — including federal options.
1

Complete Your FAFSA & Accept the Federal Direct Student Loan

Every student qualifies. No credit check, no co-signer. Fixed rate (~6.53%). This is the foundation of every borrowing plan — take the full annual amount before considering anything else.

✓ No Credit Check ✓ No Co-signer Federal Protections
2

Get Your Rate from College Ave

Apply in 3 minutes. Soft credit pull only — won't affect your credit score. College Ave is known for rewarding high FICO scores with some of the most competitive rates available.

✓ Soft Pull Only ✓ 3-Minute Application Top Rated Lender
3

Get Your Rate from SoFi Student Loans

Another soft pull. SoFi offers competitive rates with strong member benefits including career coaching and financial planning tools. Apply in minutes alongside College Ave.

✓ Soft Pull Only ✓ No Origination Fee Member Benefits
4

Get Your Rate from Sallie Mae

Note: Sallie Mae uses a hard credit pull — apply after you've collected soft-pull offers. They're known for highly competitive rates, especially for borrowers with strong credit.

Hard Pull Required ✓ Competitive Rates Apply Last
5

Check Your State Loan Program (If Applicable)

Several states offer their own low-cost loan programs that can compete with or beat private rates. Check if your state participates before making your final decision.

MA: MEFA RI: RISLA Iowa Student Loan
6

Compare All Offers Side by Side — Then Decide

Line up your private offers against the Federal Parent PLUS loan. Look at total cost over the repayment period, not just the monthly payment. Choose the combination that minimizes lifetime cost while protecting your federal options.

✓ Compare APR not just rate ✓ Factor in origination fees
No application needed.
Review all offers you've collected.

Still unsure which combination is right for your family? Our advisors can model out your exact scenario — including total repayment cost across all four years — in a 1:1 session.

Schedule 1:1 Help →
💡 Smart Borrowing

3 Principles Every Family Should Follow

Before you sign anything, make sure these ideas are anchoring your decisions.

01

Always take the Federal Direct Student Loan first

No co-signer. No credit check. Federal protections. Fixed rate. It's a no-brainer — take the full annual amount before looking at any other option.

02

Define your family's borrowing criteria before you shop

Who's on the loan — student, parent, or both? Do you want a co-signer release option? Fixed or variable rate? What monthly payment is manageable? Get aligned before applying.

03

Shop at least 3 lenders, every time

Even a 0.5% rate difference can mean $2,000+ over the life of a loan. The steps above take under 30 minutes total and could save your family thousands.

🏦 529 Strategy

Should You Use Your 529 Now — or Borrow Instead?

There's no universal right answer. Here are the four factors families weigh when deciding.

01

Using 529 Funds Upfront

Reduces total borrowing and interest costs. Smart if savings are large enough to cover meaningful portions across all four years.

02

Holding Funds for Later Years

529 assets grow tax-free. Borrowing short-term while keeping the 529 invested can make mathematical sense when loan rates are low.

03

Tax Credit Coordination

Using 529 distributions and claiming education tax credits in the same year requires careful planning — they can't fully overlap.

04

Think All Four Years

Front-loading withdrawals in Year 1 can leave you exposed when costs peak in Years 3–4. Model the full arc before committing.

Bottom line: The right 529 strategy depends on your savings balance, expected financial aid changes year over year, and long-term repayment capacity. Our advisors can model your specific scenario — schedule a session here.
🔍 Full Lender Comparison

All Private Lenders Side-by-Side

Updated April 2026 — rates, terms, credit requirements, and key features across all major lenders in one place.

Private Lender Comparison Table — April 2026
⬇ Download Full Comparison (PDF)
❓ FAQs

Questions Families Ask Most

The most common questions we hear from parents navigating college borrowing for the first time.

Should we take out federal loans before private loans?
Yes — always start with the Federal Direct Student Loan (FDSL). It requires only a completed FAFSA, has competitive fixed rates, and comes with federal repayment protections that private loans don't offer. If you're considering Parent PLUS, compare it against private options first — private loans are often cheaper for families with strong credit, especially now that PLUS loans have new caps and carry a 4.228% origination fee.
How much is too much to borrow?
A widely used guideline: total student debt at graduation should not exceed the student's expected first-year salary. A student expecting to earn $55K/year should ideally graduate with under $55K in debt. In practice it's more nuanced — major, school type, and loan type all factor in. Our advisors can model a repayment projection specific to your situation.
Are Parent PLUS loans a good option in 2026?
They're a federal option, which has some advantages (deferment, no income requirement), but the 2026 changes make them significantly less useful: new borrowers are capped at $20K/year and $65K lifetime, and the rate (8.94%) plus origination fee (4.228%) make them expensive. For families with good credit, private loans often offer lower total cost. Always compare PLUS against at least 2–3 private offers before applying.
What's the difference between a soft pull and a hard pull?
A soft credit pull checks your credit for a rate estimate without affecting your score — College Ave and SoFi both offer this. A hard pull is a formal credit inquiry that temporarily lowers your score by a few points and appears on your credit report. Sallie Mae requires a hard pull. Always collect soft-pull offers first, then decide whether to proceed with a hard-pull application.
Can we refinance our loans later?
Yes — refinancing private loans is common after graduation once income is established. However, refinancing federal loans into private loans permanently removes federal protections like income-driven repayment, forgiveness programs, and forbearance. Be very cautious about refinancing federal loans unless you're certain you won't need those protections.
What happens if we can't make payments after graduation?
Federal loans offer structured relief: income-driven repayment plans, deferment, and forbearance. Private loan options depend on the lender — some offer hardship programs, many don't. This is a key reason to maximize federal borrowing (up to the FDSL limits) before turning to private options, even when private rates are lower.
🎥 Webinar Recording

Watch: Borrow Smart for College

Full recording of our "How to Pay the College Bill & Borrow Smart" webinar — covering everything in this toolkit with live Q&A from real families.

Still unsure which loans are right for your family?

Our advisors work 1:1 with families to build a complete borrowing plan — including total repayment cost, lender comparisons, and 529 strategy — before the August bill arrives.

Schedule Your 1:1 Meeting → Learn About College Aid Pro

Questions? support@collegeaidpro.com

Paying the College Bill & Student Loan Toolkit 2026