Federal lawmakers and the Department of Education were active this week, advancing proposals that could reshape how students understand college costs, borrow for graduate programs, and access student loan forgiveness. From new financial aid disclosure bills to continued student loan processing delays, these developments carry real consequences for students and families planning for college or managing debt.
Here’s a quick look at the most important stories shaping higher education and student finances this week for December 19, 2025.
🎓 Headlines at a Glance
- House Committee proposes standardized financial aid award letters
- New proposal for a centralized net price calculator.
- Lawmakers push back on Education Department limits affecting nursing students.
- Student loan repayment backlogs remain high despite recent progress.

1. College Financial Aid Clarity Act Introduced in the House
The College Financial Aid Clarity Act (H.R. 6502) was introduced in the House this week, aiming to improve how colleges communicate financial aid eligibility and expected costs to students before enrollment. The bill would require institutions to use a federally designed financial aid award letter – which would be a vast improvement of the myriad of financial aid award letters currently being used.
Supporters argue that current award letters often obscure true costs, making it harder for families to compare offers or understand borrowing needs. Here’s our guide on how to read a financial aid award, so you can see how confusing it can be.
➡️ Impact: Clearer financial aid award disclosures could reduce borrowing surprises and help families avoid committing to colleges they cannot realistically afford.
2. Student Financial Clarity Act of 2025 Targets Cost Transparency
A companion bill, the Student Financial Clarity Act of 2025 (H.R. 6498), would create a centralized universal federal net price calculator. Like existing net price calculators, it would show students their estimated total cost of attendance, net price after aid, and expected debt at graduation.
Lawmakers backing the bill say inconsistent formats and vague terminology have left students confused about what college will truly cost.
However, there are concerns about the massive amount of data required to be collected and how this would actually work in practice.
➡️ Impact: If enacted, families could more easily compare colleges on price and debt outcomes, rather than relying on sticker prices or confusing award letters.
3. Lawmakers Push Back on Education Department Loan Rules for Nurses
More than 100 members of Congress sent a bipartisan letter (PDF File) urging the Department of Education to reconsider draft guidelines that exclude graduate nursing programs from the list of “professional” degrees eligible for higher federal loan limits.
Under the department’s current approach, many advanced nursing students would face lower lifetime borrowing caps than students in law or medical programs. Lawmakers argue this could limit access to nursing education and worsen workforce shortages.
You can see the full breakdown on graduate vs. professional degrees.
➡️ Impact: Borrowing limits directly affect who can afford advanced nursing degrees, particularly students without family financial support.
4. Student Loan IDR Backlog Remains Near 800,000
A newly filed Student Loan Status Report shows that the backlog of income-driven repayment (IDR) applications remains near 800,000, despite some improvement following the federal shutdown. The report indicates ongoing delays for borrowers seeking IDR enrollment and PSLF buyback processing.
Many borrowers are still waiting months for decisions that affect monthly payments and forgiveness timelines.
➡️ Impact: Processing delays leave borrowers in limbo, facing incorrect payments or stalled progress toward forgiveness.
