Key Points
- The One Big Beautiful Bill includes a permanent extension of the tax-free employer student loan assistance benefit, previously set to expire in 2025.
- Employers can continue offering up to $5,250 annually in tax-free student loan repayment benefits without it being treated as income.
- This move may encourage more companies to adopt student loan repayment programs as part of employee compensation packages.
A provision that began as a temporary pandemic-era tax break is now a permanent part of the tax code, giving both workers and employers a reason to celebrate.
Buried inside the sweeping federal budget package known as the One Big Beautiful Bill is a measure that codifies the tax-free treatment of employer-paid student loan assistance. The benefit allows companies to make up to $5,250 in annual student loan payments on behalf of employees without triggering income taxes for the worker or payroll taxes for the company.
The provision had been set to expire at the end of 2025. Lawmakers have now ensure that employers can offer this benefit going forward. Plus, they also indexed the limit for inflation, rounded to the nearest multiple of $50. So the amount could rise every year!
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Temporary Benefit To Permanent Policy
Before 2020, any payments a company made toward a worker’s student loans counted as taxable income – just like wages or other compensation. That changed when Congress passed the CARES Act at the start of the Covid-19 pandemic. Section 2206 of that law gave employers the option to make tax-free contributions to student loan balances, mirroring the tax treatment of tuition repayment assistance programs.
The original benefit was limited to payments made between March 27, 2020, and December 31, 2020. A later package extended it through 2025. Now, with the passage of the One Big Beautiful Bill, that deadline is gone.
Employers and workers can treat the payments as non-taxable for the foreseeable future.
How The Benefit Works
Employers can contribute up to $5,250 per year, per employee, toward student loan payments. The payments can go toward either federal or private loans and can be made directly to the loan servicer or reimbursed to the employee.
Employees who receive this benefit do not report it as income, and employers avoid payroll taxes on those amounts. The $5,250 cap applies across both student loan payments and traditional tuition reimbursement, so an employee cannot receive $5,250 for each.
Here’s an example: If an employer reimburses an employee $3,000 for a graduate course and also pays $2,000 toward their student loans, the full $5,000 would be tax-free. But if the total exceeds $5,250, the extra amount would be taxed as wages.
Also, you cannot deduct the interest on student loans to the extent that it is paid on a tax-free basis through either of these programs. Learn more about the student loan interest deduction.
Who Qualifies?
To offer the benefit, employers must establish a Section 127 educational assistance program. This requires a written plan and nondiscriminatory application, meaning the benefit cannot be offered only to highly compensated employees.
Employees with student loan debt, including those with older federal loans or private education loans, are eligible if their employer has opted into the program. The loan does not have to be in the employee’s name, but if the employer chooses to extend the benefit to co-signed loans or parent loans, that must be defined in the plan.
Self-employed workers can also create a Section 127 program through their own businesses, but they must follow the same written-plan and documentation requirements.
This isn’t terribly hard, and there are companies that can help. However, it is an added expense and companies may not want to offer it or create the required program.
What’s Next
The move to make the provision permanent comes at a time of continued uncertainty for those with student loans.
Now that the benefit is permanent, hopefully more companies will offer it to support workers facing student loan debt. It also gives employers another way to differentiate themselves in a competitive labor market.
But while the federal tax code now favors this benefit, it remains up to individual companies to implement it. And it’s still an expense for the business – just like payroll or other compensation. Many small and mid-sized businesses may still hesitate due to the administrative burden or cost, especially if their workers are not demanding it.
Still, the permanent status gives human resource departments a reason to take another look.
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Editor: Clint Proctor
Reviewed by: Chris Muller
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