Metadata
Title
Financial Aid and Scholarships
Category
graduate
UUID
1200b4c6c7ff4b91b7d3ba9d00d1dbc4
Source URL
https://financialaid.ucdavis.edu/loans/graduate
Parent URL
https://financialaid.ucdavis.edu/loans
Crawl Time
2026-03-23T19:43:30+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Financial Aid and Scholarships

Source: https://financialaid.ucdavis.edu/loans/graduate Parent: https://financialaid.ucdavis.edu/loans

Loans for Graduate Students

Graduate Student Loans

Loans are a form of financial aid that must be repaid. Educational loans have varying fees, interest rates, repayment terms, and/or borrower protections. Borrowers must submit a Free Application for Federal Student Aid, the FAFSA, and meet eligibility requirements to receive loans.

Interest rate and loan feesfor the year are determined annually on July 1.

Upcoming changes to graduate borrowing

Beginning July 1, 2026, federal law will change how graduate borrowing works.

Legacy borrowers, students who borrow a Graduate PLUS Loan before July 1, 2026:

New borrowers, students who have not borrowed before July 1, 2026:

Locating your loan servicers

Visit Federal Student Aid to log in and locate your federal loan servicer(s). Contact your loan servicer for additional details.

Accepting Loans

You can accept all or a portion of your loan at any time during the academic year, although it is important to note that the deadline to accept an offered federal and/or institutional loan for each academic year is mid-May.

Steps to accept a loan:

Declining or reducing loans

Borrowers can decline all or part of the loan. Direct loan fund revisions may be requested within 120 days of the disbursement date. A balance may be created if the loan funds you are declining have already been applied to your MyBill account. Visit MyBill to review and repay any account balances created by the revision request.

Note: If the request is received outside of the 120-day disbursement period, the school will make a partial loan revision and direct you to the appropriate loan servicer for repayment guidance.

Steps to decline or reduce a loan:

Federal loan updates

Learn how the One Big Beautiful Bill, or OBBB, Act affects your federal loan borrowing. Visit Changes to federal student loans.

Direct Loan Fee Calculator

University Loans

Major-Specific Loans

Private Loans

Emergency and Short-Term Loans

Corbett Disclosure

Before You Borrow

Keeping track of loans

Repaying loans