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Find similar grantsRural Iowa Veterinarian Loan Repayment Program is sponsored by Iowa Department of Education. This program provides loan repayment incentives to individuals practicing in specified rural Iowa communities for up to four years, addressing critical veterinarian shortages.
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Rural Iowa Veterinarian Loan Repayment Program | Department of Education Rural Iowa Veterinarian Loan Repayment Program The Rural Iowa Veterinarian Loan Repayment Program was established to address critical veterinarian shortages in rural Iowa communities. The program provides loan repayment incentives to individuals that practice in specified locations for up to four years.
The maximum award for this program is $60,000, which is paid in four increments toward outstanding Federal Subsidized Stafford, Unsubsidized Stafford, and Graduate PLUS balances at the end of each 12 month employment period. Details on the taxability of loan repayment benefits can be found on the IRS website .
An individual is eligible to apply to enter into a program agreement if he or she: Is in the final year of, or has completed within the past five years, a doctor of veterinary medicine degree program. Has not participated in or received loan repayment awards through the National Veterinary Medicine Loan Repayment Program administered by the National Institute of Food and Agriculture.
Will receive or possess a license to practice veterinary medicine in Iowa. Will secure full-time employment in an eligible area and practice full-time for a period of four consecutive years after entering into the program agreement. An eligible applicant must work full-time for four consecutive years in a veterinary shortage area or service commitment area.
Veterinary Shortage Area (blue areas on the map) A veterinary shortage area is a service area in Iowa published by the United States Department of Agriculture. The Veterinary Shortage Areas below were established for 2025-26. If the applicant is NOT going to work full-time in a Veterinary Shortage Area (map above), the individual can still qualify as long as they plan to work in a Rural Service Commitment Area (map below).
Although, the Rural Service Commitment Area must agree to provide a matching contribution equal to 12. 5 percent of the veterinarian's eligible federal student loan balance. Rural Service Commitment Area (gray areas on the map) A rural service commitment area is an Iowa city with a population less than 26,000 located more than 20 miles from a city with a population of at least 50,000.
Service commitment areas must provide a matching contribution equal to 12. 5% of the veterinarian’s eligible student loan balance to a trust fund held by the state of Iowa that will fund future recipient awards.
An individual who meets the above eligibility requirements, and is selected to sign a program agreement must fulfill the following requirements: Become licensed and employed in the practice of veterinary medicine in a veterinary shortage area or rural service commitment area in Iowa within one year of signing a program agreement or completing the doctor of veterinary medicine degree, whichever is most recent.
Work for a minimum of four consecutive years in an eligible area.
In the event that all on-time eligible applicants cannot be funded with available appropriations, program agreements will be prioritized as follows: Eligible applicants who will practice as private practice food supply veterinarians in a veterinary shortage area and who graduated from an Iowa high school; followed by eligible applicants who will practice as private practice food supply veterinarians in a veterinary shortage area and who did not graduate from an Iowa high school.
Eligible applicants who will practice as private practice food supply veterinarians in a service commitment area and who graduated from an Iowa high school; followed by eligible applicants who will practice as private practice food supply veterinarians in a service commitment area and who did not graduate from an Iowa high school.
Eligible applicants who will practice as veterinarians in a service commitment area and who graduated from an Iowa high school; followed by eligible applicants who will practice as veterinarians in a service commitment area and who did not graduate from an Iowa high school. Eligible applicants within each priority category will be prioritized by the date the application is received by Iowa College Aid.
Up to $15,000 can be paid annually toward eligible student loan balances upon successful completion of each 12-month employment period. Federal loans eligible for repayment include all Subsidized Stafford, Unsubsidized Stafford, and Graduate PLUS. If an applicant signs an agreement but fails to meet the program criteria prior to receiving a loan repayment award, the applicant has no further employment requirement under the agreement.
Apply to the Rural Iowa Veterinarian Loan Repayment Program . Applications for the 2026–27 cycle open Feb. 1, 2026.
Applying before this date will result in an error. State Financial Aid Programs Team grants. iowacollegeaid@iowa.
gov
According to the current listing, eligibility includes: An individual must work full-time for four consecutive years in a veterinary shortage area or service commitment area in Iowa. Confirm the full requirements in the official notice before applying.
The current listing shows up to $60,000 ($15,000 annually). Verify award ceilings, matching requirements, and allowable costs in the official notice.
Rural Iowa Veterinarian Loan Repayment Program is funded by Iowa Department of Education. Verify program details on the funder's official page before applying.
This opportunity targets applicants in Iowa. If your organization operates elsewhere, check the official notice for location requirements.
Start from the official opportunity page linked in this listing — it carries the sponsor's submission instructions.
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