Unpacking the Parent PLUS Loan Program and Its Risks
Federal Parent PLUS loans, formally known as Direct PLUS Loans for parents, allow parents of dependent undergraduate students to borrow money to cover the cost of attendance at eligible postsecondary institutions. Unlike student Direct loans, Parent PLUS loans have no fixed annual or aggregate borrowing limits, making them a flexible but potentially dangerous option. Parents can borrow up to the full cost of attendance minus other financial aid, with interest rates currently around 8.05% for loans disbursed in 2025-2026, plus origination fees of about 4.228%.
In contrast, Pell Grants represent the cornerstone of need-based aid for low-income students. The Federal Pell Grant Program provides grant aid—money that does not need to be repaid—to undergraduates with exceptional financial need. For the 2025-2026 award year, the maximum Pell Grant is $7,395, targeted at families earning less than roughly $40,000 annually, depending on factors like family size and cost of attendance. Pell eligibility signals profound financial hardship, yet the New America report reveals colleges pairing this with Parent PLUS promotion.
This combination creates a subprime-like crisis: low-income parents saddled with unlimited, high-interest debt to subsidize education costs institutions could offset with their endowments or reallocated merit aid. Historically, Parent PLUS outstanding balances exceed $120 billion across 3.6 million borrowers, with default rates nearing 13% within four years for vulnerable groups.
The New America Report Ignites National Debate
Released in early February 2026 by education policy expert Stephen Burd at New America, "The Subprime PLUS Loan Crisis" meticulously analyzes federal data from over 300 selective colleges. It pinpoints 41 institutions—23 private and 18 public—where at least one-third of Parent PLUS borrowers come from Pell-eligible families, while these schools charge low-income students an average net price of $12,000 or more annually.
The methodology sifts public records of students graduating or leaving in 2020-2021: high Pell-PLUS overlap (≥33%), elevated net prices for the poorest freshmen, and substantial non-need-based (merit) aid to wealthier students. Across these schools, over 72,000 families borrowed Parent PLUS, with 33,000 (46% average) from low-income backgrounds, median debts hitting $40,000 at privates and $21,000 at publics.
This isn't random; it's systematic steering via enrollment management firms dictating aid packages to maximize revenue.Crafting a strong academic CV can help families navigate better opportunities amid such practices.

Private Powerhouses: Endowments vs. Family Debt
Private universities dominate the list with deep pockets yet aggressive PLUS reliance. All 23 have endowments over $500 million—11 exceed $1 billion—yet dispensed median $61 million in non-need-based aid in 2023, often prioritizing high-achievers over need.
St. John’s University (New York) leads with 56% of its 3,068 PLUS families Pell-eligible, median debt over $42,000, despite $218 million in merit aid and a $23,500 net price for poorest freshmen. The George Washington University follows: 36% of 722 families low-income, $26,000 median debt, amid $23,000 average merit awards to 29% of freshmen.
- University of Miami: 62% freshmen get merit aid ($23,000 avg)
- Drexel University: $100 million non-need aid
- Pepperdine University: Highest net price $36,000 for low-income
- Quinnipiac, Hofstra, Loyola Marymount, Fordham, TCU also flagged
Chicago’s DePaul and Loyola Chicago drew local ire: Loyola's 48% Pell-PLUS rate burdens urban low-income parents.Chicago Sun-Times coverage
These schools meet 85% median need but net prices trap families.
Public Universities Betraying Their Mandate?
Public flagships, taxpayer-funded gateways to mobility, account for 18 schools. Aggregate: 46,000 PLUS families, 46% Pell (21,000), $21,000+ median debt.
University of Alabama tops non-need aid at $185 million; its Birmingham campus hit 64% Pell-PLUS. Auburn, LSU, Arizona, South Carolina, Cincinnati, Kent State, George Mason, Temple University face scrutiny. Temple's $23,000 net price for poorest is stark; UConn gives merit to 88% freshmen.
| University | Pell-PLUS Share | Median Debt | Net Price Low-Income |
|---|---|---|---|
| U. Alabama | High | $21k+ | $19k |
| Auburn U. | High | $21k+ | $16k |
| Temple U. | High | $21k+ | $23k |
State disinvestment? Notably absent: California, Florida publics.Related higher ed reforms
Photo by Sandy Millar on Unsplash

The Mechanics of Loan Steering and Enrollment Management
Financial aid leveraging, powered by firms like EAB or Ruffalo Noel Levitz, algorithms craft packages: lavish merit to stars, token grants to low-income, gap filled by PLUS. Step-by-step: 1) FAFSA reveals need; 2) Small Pell-max package leaves gap; 3) Aid letter touts PLUS as 'easy federal option'; 4) Parents borrow unlimited; 5) College saves on grants, boosts rankings via high-achievers.
WSJ exposed Baylor (2010-2015): $44,000 median PLUS for families earning less. Now many offer low-income tuition waivers, but room/board excluded.
- Risks: No adverse credit check beyond basics, deferred payments balloon debt.
- Benefits to colleges: Revenue without endowment dip.
Human Toll: Stories and Statistics of Family Ruin
Low-income parents face default rates 2x Stafford loans; 13% default in 4 years. Total PLUS delinquency ~10% Q4 2025. Black families hit hardest, per past Education Trust reports. Parents delay retirement, kids inherit debt—perpetuating poverty.
Quote from Burd: "A potential subprime PLUS loan crisis is looming... disaster unless government acts." Families report feeling trapped: "Stuck until I die."
Net prices $14k-$36k/year crush $30k family incomes. Explore scholarships as alternatives.
Institutions Push Back: Denials and New Initiatives
Responses vary: St. John’s touts need-blind; Quinnipiac denies unsustainable debt push; U. Alabama highlights scholarships. Kent State, Cincinnati launched full-tuition for <$75k families. USC defends merit for talent. Drexel, Charleston: No PLUS in letters.
Critics: Actions reactive, data damning.
Experts Demand Accountability and Reform
Peter Granville (Century Foundation): "Name names... spell out harm." Burd laments publics' betrayal. Brookings notes OBBBA caps ($20k/yr, $65k total) miss root, strip ICR safety net.
Photo by Markus Winkler on Unsplash
Policy Landscape: OBBBA Changes and Gaps
2025's One Big Beautiful Bill Act caps PLUS but experts say insufficient for steered families. No consolidation to ICR; pushes private loans. Future: New America part 3 eyes enrollment firms curbs.
Solutions, Outlook, and Next Steps for Families
Recommendations: Transparency mandates, PLUS limits tied to income/net price, clawback non-need aid. Families: Scrutinize packages, seek community colleges first, use higher ed jobs for income boost. Institutions: Reallocate merit to need.
Outlook: Mounting pressure, but debt crisis looms. Rate professors at suspect schools via Rate My Professor; pursue higher ed career advice. Post jobs at AcademicJobs.com. Check university jobs for stability.
Full list at New America.





