Specialty Guide · 2026

Student loans for anesthesiologists: your 2026 repayment strategy

With a typical attending income around $450,000 and education debt often in the $250k–$400k range, anesthesiologists face a specific set of repayment tradeoffs. Here's how to think about it — and a free tool to find your answer.

Find your lowest-cost repayment path

Enter your real numbers and we'll compare PSLF, RAP, capped IBR, and refinancing — ranked by true lifetime cost. Free, no signup to see your answer.

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The key question for anesthesiologists

High attending income means PSLF often forgives little, so the math frequently favors refinancing once you're an attending — unless you're at a nonprofit/academic hospital.

How the decision usually breaks down

What about the new RAP plan?

As of July 1, 2026, the Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP) is the new federal income-driven option. For anesthesiologists, whether RAP beats legacy IBR or refinancing comes down to your income and PSLF eligibility — which is exactly what our calculator sorts out. RAP vs IBR explained →

Stop guessing — see your actual numbers

Every anesthesiologist's situation is different. Run yours free and get a ranked, explainable recommendation in two minutes.

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Educational estimates, not financial advice. Income and debt figures are representative ranges, not your specific numbers. Verify program rules at studentaid.gov. See our methodology and disclosures.