Graduate enrollment has quietly carried the revenue line at hundreds of institutions through the undergraduate slowdown. A large share of it was financed by one federal program — Grad PLUS — that lets a graduate student borrow up to the full cost of attendance. On July 1, 2026, that program closes to new borrowers, and unsubsidized graduate borrowing is capped at $20,500 per year.
We pulled the Federal Student Aid disbursement data for every institution. The median graduate program's Grad PLUS borrowers took $20,081 each — already at the new annual cap, before adding the unsubsidized Stafford loans most of them also carry. The math doesn't survive the policy change for a wide band of programs.
The policy, in one paragraph
Grad PLUS let a graduate or professional student borrow up to the full published cost of attendance, with no aggregate limit. The 2025 reconciliation law ends it for new borrowers from July 1, 2026 and replaces the open faucet with a fixed annual cap. Students mid-program retain access for a limited window; new entrants do not. The programs most exposed are the ones whose price assumed the faucet was open — and whose students were borrowing well past the new ceiling.
Where the gap is biggest
The largest per-borrower Grad PLUS balances cluster in the high-cost health professions — exactly the programs that priced to the old, uncapped reality.
| Institution | Avg Grad PLUS loan / borrower | vs. $20,500 cap |
|---|---|---|
| Roseman University of Health Sciences | $84,905 | 4.1× |
| Midwestern University–Downers Grove | $79,358 | 3.9× |
| Meharry Medical College | $71,726 | 3.5× |
| Rocky Vista University | $69,724 | 3.4× |
| National median (all programs) | $20,081 | 1.0× |
A student who was borrowing $70,000 a year through Grad PLUS now faces a $20,500 federal ceiling. The roughly $50,000 difference has to come from somewhere — private loans, family resources, institutional aid, or a decision not to enroll.
The programs most exposed to the Grad PLUS cap are the ones that never had to talk about price. They are about to have to.
What it does to the graduate funnel
Three things happen at once. Sticker sensitivity, which graduate marketing has largely been able to ignore, becomes a top-of-funnel filter. The private-loan conversation — interest rates, cosigners, credit — moves from the financial-aid office into the admissions decision. And programs that competed purely on brand now compete on whether the financing closes for a real applicant.
The marketing response
- Lead with ROI, not prestige. If a program produces graduates who earn well, publish the median earnings and the realistic repayment math on the program page now — before the cap makes families ask.
- Build the financing story in advance. Name the institutional aid, the private-loan partners, the employer-reimbursement and assistantship paths. The program that has answered "how do I pay for this under the new rules?" on its own site wins the comparison.
- Know your own exposure. If more than half your graduate loan dollars ran through Grad PLUS, your enrollment model has a dependency you need to price for next cycle.
- Re-segment. Programs where students borrowed near or below $20,500 are barely affected and should say so plainly; programs far above the cap need a different message and a different yield plan.
Bottom line
This is a dated, known policy change with a hard start. The institutions that re-tool their graduate marketing around the new financing reality before July 2026 will hold their classes. The ones that wait for the melt to show up in the August numbers will be reacting a full cycle too late.