The U.S. Department of Education’s implementation of President Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) has triggered one of the most consequential – and controversial – reclassifications of federal student lending in recent memory: graduate nursing programs are no longer counted as “professional degrees.”
That bureaucratic change reshapes how much nursing students can borrow, and which federal forgiveness benefits they can access.
Under the OBBBA, advanced academic programs fall into two buckets:
- Graduate Programs; and
- Professional Programs.
Beginning July 1, 2026, new federal borrowing rules apply:
- Graduate programs (where nursing is now assigned):
- $20,500 annual limit;
- $100,000 lifetime cap.
- Professional programs:
- $50,000 annual limit;
- $200,000 lifetime cap.
Nursing had historically been treated like other clinical preparation programs for borrowing purposes, because students relied heavily on federal direct unsubsidized and graduation plus loans to fund high-cost training. But OBBBA uses a strict federal definition tied to 11 specific professional fields, linked by shared Classification of Instructional Programs (CIP) codes. Nursing does not match any of these codes, so the Department placed it exclusively in the lower “graduate” category.
Multiple education and workforce organizations have confirmed the implications:
- Newsweek reported that nursing programs are “no longer considered professional degrees” under the restructured federal loan system.
- The American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN) stated that the new definition “explicitly excludes nursing,” reducing borrowing access for future APRNs, CRNAs, and nurse educators.
- Nursing industry outlets noted that students “will lose access to higher federal loan limits previously available to professional degree pathways.”
So – are clergy still in the higher professional cap?
Yes. And this underscores one of the most pointed criticisms of the new rules.
Graduate theology and divinity programs – training clergy – remain classified as “professional degrees.”
Because their CIP codes align with one of the fields included in the federal professional-degree list, theology students keep access to the higher $50,000 annual and $200,000 lifetime borrowing caps.
This means:
- A student studying for a Master of Divinity or doctoral studies in theology retains the higher professional-level borrowing allotment.
- A student pursuing a nurse practitioner, clinical nurse specialist, or nurse anesthetist degree is limited to the lower graduate caps – despite far higher tuition and critical workforce shortages.
Critics argue that this sends a jarring message: clergy are treated as part of a protected “professional” track for student loan purposes, while a field central to national healthcare capacity – nursing – is downgraded.
The category shift affects more than borrowing limits. Several forgiveness-related provisions interact with the program type:
- Income-driven repayment (IDR) outcomes are strongly tied to loan size; lower borrowing ceilings for nursing reduce forgiveness potential over 20–25 years.
- New repayment-assistance programs introduced under the OBBBA restrict certain benefits to “professional degree” programs, excluding nursing automatically.
- Profession-specific federal forgiveness programs (tied to the same professional list) now apply to clergy, physicians, dentists, attorneys, and pharmacists – but not to any advanced nursing role.
Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) still applies because it is employer-based, not program-based. But any new benefits tied to program classification will exclude nursing unless the Department updates its definitions.
The change is landing at a time of intense national need:
- APRN and nursing-faculty training costs will far exceed the new loan caps.
- Students from lower-income backgrounds will face financing gaps, pushing them into high-interest private loans or out of advanced practice nursing entirely.
- Reductions in the pipeline of nurse practitioners, midwives, and nurse educators could worsen already severe provider shortages in primary care, rural health, and behavioral health.
Healthcare leaders argue that the move is “counterproductive to national workforce priorities,” while nursing organizations have called it “a direct threat to the future APRN supply.”
What happens next?
The rules take effect for new borrowers beginning July 1, 2026, though advocacy groups are urging:
- Congressional clarification to explicitly recognize nursing as a professional degree;
- Public comments and administrative challenges during the remaining regulatory process; and
- Expansion of state and employer-based loan-assistance programs that operate outside the federal professional-degree list.
Contact the Author:
tpowell@tpowellcpa.com


















