RAP payment by income › $110,000
RAP Payment on a $110,000 Salary
A single borrower earning $110,000 (AGI) with no dependents would pay an estimated $917/month under the 2026 Repayment Assistance Plan — 10% of AGI. Adjust dependents and family size below for your exact number.
How the $110,000 payment breaks down
- Bracket rate: 10% of AGI
- Base monthly: $917
- Monthly payment (0 dependents): $917
- Annual total: $11,000
RAP payment at $110,000 by dependents
| Dependents | Monthly RAP payment |
|---|---|
| 0 | $917/mo |
| 1 | $867/mo |
| 2 | $817/mo |
| 3 | $767/mo |
RAP vs IBR at $110,000
New IBR is about $196/mo cheaper than RAP at $110,000. Compare RAP vs IBR in detail →
| Plan | Estimated monthly |
|---|---|
| RAP | $917/mo |
| New IBR (20 yr) | $721/mo |
Frequently asked questions
How much is the RAP payment on a $110,000 salary?
For a single borrower earning $110,000 (AGI) with no dependents, the estimated RAP payment is $917 per month — 10% of AGI, or about $11,000 per year. Each dependent you claim lowers it by $50/month.
Is RAP or IBR cheaper at $110,000?
New IBR is about $196/mo cheaper than RAP at $110,000. RAP charges a flat 10% of AGI on your full AGI, while New IBR charges 10% of discretionary income (AGI minus 150% of the poverty line). Run your exact family size in the calculator above.
How do dependents change my $110,000 RAP payment?
RAP subtracts $50/month per dependent. At $110,000, that means about $917/mo with 0 dependents, $867/mo with 1 dependent, $817/mo with 2 dependents, $767/mo with 3 dependents. The payment never drops below the $10/month minimum.
Estimates use published RAP rules as of June 2026 and 2025 HHS poverty guidelines. $110,000 is treated as your AGI. Your servicer’s final figures may differ.
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