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Repayment Guide · Updated June 2026

Student Loan Deferment: What Pausing Payments Really Costs

The "postpone my payments" button looks like relief. On subsidized loans it sometimes is. On unsubsidized and private loans, it silently adds thousands to your balance — because interest doesn't take a break just because you do.

12 min read·Informational only — not financial advice

In This Guide

  1. Subsidized vs Unsubsidized: Not All Deferments Are Equal
  2. The Real Numbers: What Deferment Costs Over Time
  3. Capitalization: The Mechanism That Multiplies the Damage
  4. Deferment vs Forbearance
  5. What to Try Before Requesting Deferment
  6. Calculate Your Deferment Cost
  7. When Deferment Is Actually the Right Call
  8. The 4-Step Deferment Cost Formula
  9. Frequently Asked Questions
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The button that says "postpone my payments" is one of the most quietly expensive options in your loan servicer's dashboard. For borrowers going through genuine financial hardship, job loss, or a return to school, it sometimes is the right call. But for the majority of borrowers who request deferment without running the numbers first, it's a decision that adds thousands of dollars to their total debt and months or years to their repayment timeline.

The reason is simple: interest doesn't take a break just because you do. On unsubsidized federal loans and virtually all private loans, that interest capitalizes when deferment ends — meaning it becomes part of your principal, and you now pay interest on a larger balance for the remainder of your loan term.

Subsidized vs Unsubsidized: Not All Deferments Are Equal

One distinction changes everything about deferment costs:

Loan TypeInterest During Deferment?Interest During Forbearance?Capitalization Risk
Subsidized FederalNo — govt covers it during qualifying defermentYes — subsidy doesn't applyForbearance only
Unsubsidized FederalYes — full rate accrues dailyYesBoth deferment & forbearance
Graduate PLUSYes — full rate accrues dailyYesBoth
Private LoansYes — most require at least interest paymentsYesBoth; terms vary by lender

If your portfolio is mixed, deferment affects each loan differently. Subsidized loans come out of deferment unchanged. Unsubsidized and private loans come out larger. When you have a choice about which loans to defer, always defer subsidized first.

✓ Subsidized loans: the one genuinely free pause

During qualifying deferment periods (in-school, unemployment, economic hardship), the federal government pays the interest on your subsidized Direct Loans. Your balance stays flat. This is the program working as designed — use it without hesitation if you qualify and have subsidized loans.

⚠️ Forbearance costs more than deferment on subsidized loans

During forbearance, the government interest subsidy on subsidized loans does not apply. Interest accrues even on subsidized loans. If you qualify for deferment, always request deferment rather than forbearance to preserve the subsidy.

The Real Numbers: What Deferment Costs Over Time

These aren't worst-case scenarios — they're straightforward calculations on typical federal loan balances and rates. The costs escalate sharply with deferment length:

Scenario A — 6 Months
Balance$35,000
Rate6.54%
Daily interest$6.27/day
Interest accrued~$1,141
Capitalized balance$36,141
True cost by payoff: ~$2,400
Scenario B — 2 Years
Balance$35,000
Rate6.54%
Daily interest$6.27/day
Interest accrued~$4,746
Capitalized balance$39,746
True cost by payoff: ~$7,900
Scenario C — 3 Years (High Balance)
Balance$85,000
Rate7.05%
Daily interest$16.41/day
Interest accrued~$17,969
Capitalized balance$102,969
True cost by payoff: $15,000–$20,000+
True cost by payoff (including compounded interest on capitalized amount)
6-month deferment
$35k at 6.54%
~$2,400
2-year deferment
$35k at 6.54%
~$7,900
3-year deferment
$85k at 7.05%
$15,000–$20,000+

Capitalization: The Mechanism That Multiplies the Damage

Interest accrual is the immediate cost. Capitalization is what turns a temporary pause into a permanent balance increase. When deferment ends and accrued interest capitalizes, your loan's principal resets at the higher number — and every future interest charge for the remaining life of your loan is based on that inflated balance.

You're not just paying back the interest that accrued during deferment. You're paying interest on that interest for years afterward.

How $2,000 accrued interest becomes ~$2,900 by payoff
Accrued during deferment
$2,000
Capitalizes onto principal
+$2,000 balance
8 yrs remaining at 6.5%
+$900 more interest
True payoff cost
~$2,900
Capitalized interest compounds for the entire remaining term of your loan. The earlier in repayment the capitalization occurs, the higher the final cost — every future interest payment is calculated against the inflated principal.

⚠️ The SAVE interest subsidy does not cover formal deferment

The SAVE repayment plan includes an interest subsidy that prevents unpaid interest from capitalizing during SAVE enrollment. But that protection applies while you're actively enrolled in SAVE and making payments — not during formal deferment periods. Entering deferment while on SAVE does not preserve the subsidy.

Deferment vs Forbearance: Two Pauses With the Same Core Problem

The terms are often used interchangeably, but they're technically distinct — and for subsidized loan holders, the distinction has real dollar consequences.

Deferment is available for qualifying situations: in-school enrollment, unemployment, economic hardship, active military service. On subsidized loans, the government covers interest. On unsubsidized, it accrues.

Forbearance is available more broadly, often at the servicer's discretion. Interest accrues on all loan types during forbearance — including subsidized loans. The government interest subsidy doesn't apply. For subsidized loan holders, this means forbearance is always more expensive than deferment, for the same length of pause.

What Borrowers Should Try Before Requesting Deferment

Deferment isn't always avoidable. But before requesting it on federal loans, exhaust these options in order:

📊
Switch to an income-driven repayment plan first
An IDR plan may reduce your required payment to $0/month if your income is very low — with a critical advantage over deferment: $0 IDR payments still count toward PSLF and IDR forgiveness timelines. A borrower who defers for 12 months loses 12 months of progress. A borrower on SAVE at $0/month gains 12 qualifying payments. Same out-of-pocket cost, completely different outcome.
📅
Request a reduced payment or extended plan
Switching to an Extended or Graduated Repayment Plan lowers your monthly payment by stretching your term. Not ideal for total interest costs, but it keeps you in active repayment, prevents capitalization events, and preserves progress toward any forgiveness timeline.
💧
Pay interest only during deferment if you must defer
If deferment is unavoidable but you have any cash flow, paying just the monthly interest on your unsubsidized loans prevents it from capitalizing. For a $35,000 loan at 6.54%, that's roughly $190/month. Compared to adding $5,000–$8,000 to your balance over two years, the math usually favors paying what you can.
🏢
Check employer repayment benefits before pausing
Many public sector employers and an increasing number of private companies offer student loan repayment assistance — sometimes $100–$200/month as an employee benefit. Employer contributions during deferment can offset accruing interest even when your own payment is paused. Check your HR benefits package first.
Same $0 out-of-pocket — completely different outcomes
✗ Deferment ($0 monthly)
✓ IDR at $0/month (SAVE)
PSLF progress: +0 payments during deferment
IDR forgiveness countdown: paused, no progress
Interest: accrues on unsubsidized loans, capitalizes on exit
Balance after 12 months: higher (capitalized interest added)
PSLF progress: +12 qualifying payments
IDR forgiveness countdown: +12 months toward 20–25 yr forgiveness
Interest: SAVE subsidy may cover unpaid interest — balance may stay flat
Balance after 12 months: same or lower (no capitalization event)

Related: Income-Driven Repayment Plans: Which One Saves You Most? →

If you're considering deferment because your payment is unaffordable, an IDR plan likely gets you to $0/month without the capitalization hit or the lost forgiveness progress.

Calculate Your Deferment Cost

Enter your balance, rate, deferment length, and loan type. The calculator shows your capitalized balance after deferment, the increase in monthly payment, and the extra lifetime interest cost — broken out for unsubsidized and subsidized loans separately.

Deferment Cost Calculator

Calculating…
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When Deferment Is Actually the Right Call

Fairness requires saying this explicitly: sometimes deferment is the correct decision.

The problem isn't deferment as a last resort. The problem is deferment as a first resort — requested before exploring IDR options, before calculating the actual cost, before understanding that $0/month IDR payments exist and preserve forgiveness progress in a way deferment doesn't.

The 4-Step Deferment Cost Formula

Before requesting a pause on unsubsidized or private loans, run these four steps with your own numbers:

1
Calculate daily interest
Daily interest = Balance × (Annual rate ÷ 365)
Example: $35,000 × (0.0654 ÷ 365) = $6.27/day
2
Multiply by deferment days
Accrued interest = Daily interest × Days in deferment
6 months ≈ 182 days: $6.27 × 182 = $1,141 accrued
3
Add accrued interest to balance
Capitalized balance = Original balance + Accrued interest
$35,000 + $1,141 = $36,141 — your new starting principal
4
Calculate additional lifetime interest
Extra cost = Total interest on capitalized balance − Total interest on original balance
Run amortization on both balances at the same rate and remaining term. The difference is your true deferment cost — often 2× the accrued interest alone.

Related: Student Loan Payoff Timeline: How Long Will It Really Take? →

A deferment event changes your payoff date. Use the payoff calculator to model your new timeline after capitalization — with and without extra payments to recover lost ground.


Frequently Asked Questions

Does interest capitalize immediately when I request deferment?
No. Interest accrues daily throughout the deferment period but typically capitalizes in a single event when deferment ends and you re-enter repayment. Some servicers also capitalize interest at other trigger points — such as when you change repayment plans — so check your loan agreement for the specific capitalization triggers on your loans.
If I defer during grad school, how much will my balance grow?
Significantly. A borrower with $50,000 in unsubsidized loans at 6.54% who defers for three years of graduate school will see their balance grow by roughly $10,000–$11,000 in accrued interest alone before making a single payment. If they take out additional graduate loans during that period, the capitalization compounds further when those deferments also end.
Can I defer only some of my loans and keep paying others?
Yes. Deferment is applied per loan and you can be selective. It generally makes sense to defer subsidized loans first — they accrue no interest during qualifying deferment — and continue paying, or at least paying interest on, your highest-rate unsubsidized and private loans.
Does deferment affect my credit score?
Authorized deferment processed through your servicer doesn't negatively affect your credit score. Your loans remain in good standing. However, if you stop making payments without formally requesting and being approved for deferment, your loans can go delinquent and eventually default — which is severely damaging to your credit.
Will deferment affect my PSLF qualifying payment count?
Yes. Months in deferment don't count as qualifying payments toward PSLF or IDR forgiveness timelines. If you have 87 qualifying PSLF payments and defer for 12 months, you still have 87 when you return — you haven't lost payments, but you haven't gained any either. For PSLF borrowers, enrolling in SAVE at $0/month instead of deferring earns 12 qualifying payments over that same period at the same out-of-pocket cost.

Pause Thoughtfully — or Don't Pause at All

Before you hit pause, spend 10 minutes running the numbers. Calculate what your balance will look like when deferment ends. Check whether a $0/month IDR payment achieves the same cash flow result without the capitalization hit.

Calculate My True Deferment Cost

⚠️ For informational purposes only — not financial advice.

More Free Calculators

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IDR Payment Calculator — find your $0/month IDR alternative to deferment →

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Payoff Calculator — model your new timeline after a capitalization event →

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Extra Payment Impact — see how quickly you can recover lost ground after deferment →