Universities respond to new federal Grad PLUS loan caps
Santa Clara University School of Law will guarantee $16,000 annual scholarships starting next fall, fully covering tuition following the new federal Grad PLUS loan caps set for 2026 by the Trump administration.
Starting July 1, 2026, Grad PLUS loans will be capped at $50,000 per student per year. New borrowers pursuing professional degrees, such as law, will face a lifetime limit of $200,000, while those in other graduate programs will be restricted to $100,000.
The new PLEDGE Scholarship from the California Law School is the first public response by a law school to federal Grad PLUS loan caps.
The scholarships will “relieve next year’s students from the kind of financial pressure that might otherwise preclude them from pursuing rewarding legal careers of great prominence and purpose,” Santa Clara Law Dean Michael Kaufman said in a statement.
Critics of the caps warn they will create funding shortfalls for students enrolled in high-cost professional programs.
University of North Carolina Student Body President Adolfo Alvarez expressed alarm in a LinkedIn statement about the caps in federal loan assistance.
“It’s going to be really damaging,” Alvarez said.
Supporters argue that the limits address long-standing issues in the student loan system.
Wayne Winegarden, senior fellow in business and economics at Pasadena-based Pacific Research Institute, told The Center Square in an exclusive interview that unlimited borrowing has fueled rising tuition costs.
“There’s been a problem with the student loan program in that it enables schools to cost a lot of the subsidy that’s been going to students to be able to kind of borrow, especially borrow cheaply, which has ended up just driving up the costs of universities,” said Winegarden.
He urged students to weigh program expenses against future earnings potential.
“Financial realities don’t go away just because we wish that they weren’t there,” Winegarden added. “If you’re going to be going to a university that costs $20,000 a year, you need to come out with a degree that increases your economic value.”
Latest News Stories
Law designed to help veterans affected by nuclear testing
WATCH: Pritzker ‘absolutely, foursquare opposed’ to Chicago mayor’s head tax
Illinois quick hits: Elections board splits on Harmon fine; busiest summer at O’Hare
Congressman proposes bipartisan bill to address fentanyl
API now opposes year-round E15 sales, citing shifting, unstable environment for refiners
Trump administration asks Supreme Court to toss stay in National Guard case
GOP candidates: Illinois families struggle while Pritzker wins in Las Vegas
WATCH: Pritzker wants immigration enforcement, just not Trump’s way
Trump tells Dems to ‘stop the madness’ after three weeks of government shutdown
Trump, Putin meeting in Hungary called off
WATCH: Businesses argue Congress holds purse strings in tariff challenge
Report: FEMA under Biden politically discriminated against Americans