Metadata
Title
Federal Updates
Category
general
UUID
f0cd62d145914c9ea158fb071734e930
Source URL
https://fas.ucsd.edu/resources/federal-updates/index.html
Parent URL
https://fas.ucsd.edu/
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T04:23:08+00:00
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Federal Updates

Source: https://fas.ucsd.edu/resources/federal-updates/index.html Parent: https://fas.ucsd.edu/

Overview of H.R.1 Bill

119th Congress (2025–2026)

On July 4, 2025, President Donald Trump signed the H.R. 1 bill (One Big Beautiful Bill Act) into law. Significant provisions that will affect college students are slated to take effect on July 1, 2026.

You can refer to this page for information and ongoing updates about how the bill may affect your financial aid, as well as factors to consider when planning for the changes.

On this page:

Summary of Key Impacts

In this section, you’ll find key impacts of the law on financial aid.* (Additional provisions are listed further below.) This analysis was published by the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators (NASFAA); you can find the full analysis on the NASFAA news web page. 

These provisions are effective July 1, 2026.

Note: The law does not include any changes to undergraduate student loan limits and maintains the current limits for annual and aggregate borrowing.

*Note on impacts on Student Aid Index (SAI): Cuts and restrictions in H.R. 1, although not directly related to financial aid, may reduce a family’s total resources. This in turn may change the calculation of their Student Aid Index (SAI) and thus affect their aid eligibility.

Pell Grants

Student Loans

Student Loan Repayment

What You Can Do Now

Action Items to Consider

Undergraduate Students (Current & Prospective)

Here are some points to consider about the impacts of the H.R.1 Bill on your future financial aid planning. (Note: The law does not include any changes to undergraduate student loan limits and maintains the current limits for annual and aggregate borrowing.)

Loan Limits

Loan Proration

Loan Repayment

Pell Grants

Graduate Students (Current & Prospective)

For graduate students, the two major impacts of the bill on financial aid are 1) the elimination of the Graduate PLUS loan program and 2) caps on annual graduate loans.

Students of Mixed-Status Families

The law does not directly alter eligibility for federal student financial aid programs like Pell Grants for eligible students in mixed-status families.

However, the law does include other changes that likely will impact mixed-status families, including imposing stricter eligibility requirements for other federal benefits and limiting access to Child and Educational tax credits to individuals with valid Social Security Numbers.

Parents/spouses without Social Security Numbers (SSNs) can still contribute to the FAFSA.

*Page last updated February 20, 2026.

Resources