u/No-Smell-6206

New loan changes make NO sense for U.S. students to attend a Caribbean med school

With the new federal student loan changes going into effect July 1, 2026, unless you're rich, U.S. students have NO business going to a Caribbean med school. I am a recent Saba grad with $325,000 in student loan debt, and this was AFTER receiving a scholarship.

Federal loans are capped at $200,000 for med school. However, there is also a lifetime federal borrowing limit of $257,000 for all loans (undergrad, grad, med school).

And if you already have previous Grad plus loans, that amount counts toward the $200,000 limit. This is going to affect transfer students the most, so if you're currently enrolled and taking out loans, do not even think of transferring.

I am sure schools are going to offer scholarships to almost everyone who applies to get them in. If you fail a semester and repeat, you're going to be charged full tuition, as scholarships don't apply to repeat semesters. In addition to the loan cap, there is also a new yearly cap of $50,000. So you can't borrow more than $50k per school year.

Even though I've been off the island for a year now, I have friends at different schools, and the cost of living has gone up. Electricity and groceries are very expensive, and for those who rent a car, gas is $6.66/gallon right now!

Why anyone would take out a private loan and have a co-signer for a foreign school, and that too with Sallie Mae, is a very dumb decision.

Do WHATEVER you can to improve your application, and apply DO if your stats aren't good for MD. There are so many new DO schools, and while they're not cheap either, at least you'll be stateside and a U.S. grad.

Total tuition as of June 26, 2026 for some fafsa approved schools. Remember, living costs are separate:

SGU: $377,000
ROSS: $360,462
AUC: $322,000
SABA: $298,750
SMU: $279,860
AUA: $253,050

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u/No-Smell-6206 — 10 days ago