Biden doesn't want to fight for 50,000 student loan relief. It's too hard

A system that gives any 18 year old who gets admitted to college government backed loans with nothing but a social security number could never work. The only people that benefit from this system are the colleges and the loan companies. The students get the worse of the deal. They have to leverage their financial future on the strength of their education. So if they can't get a job that pays for their loan does the government help them, does the college help them, does the loan company help them. No. We have an economy where a college degree is no longer as valuable as it once ways but costs 10 times more than it once did. And it's a trillion dollar system.

I'm down with a complete overhaul and reset. Forgive all the loans but also stop giving new ones and directly subsidize college for worthy students with a need.
 
Trump is moving forward with his plan to limit eligibility for a key student-loan forgiveness program for public servants

The education department said it would examine limiting eligibility for Public Service Loan Forgiveness.

By Ayelet Sheffey
Apr 3, 2025

 
Trump is moving forward with his plan to limit eligibility for a key student-loan forgiveness program for public servants

The education department said it would examine limiting eligibility for Public Service Loan Forgiveness.

By Ayelet Sheffey
Apr 3, 2025

Department Of Education Takes Big Step To Change Student Loan Forgiveness And Repayment Plan Rules​

ByAdam S. Minsky,

Senior Contributor.
Adam Minsky is an attorney and writer focusing on student loans.

Follow Author
Apr 03, 2025, 11:56am EDT
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Education Secretary Linda McMahon student loan forgiveness

NEW YORK, NEW YORK - MARCH 07: United States Secretary of Education Linda McMahon visits "Fox & ... More

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The U.S. Department of Education took a key step on Thursday to initiate a process that could result in major changes to several federal student loan forgiveness and repayment programs.


The department issued a formal notice of its intent to initiate negotiated rulemaking, a process under federal law that allows officials to update or change regulations governing various federal student loan programs. According to the notice, the department will focus specifically on Public Service Loan Forgiveness, Income-Contingent Repayment, and Pay As You Earn — popular programs that offer student loan forgiveness to borrowers after years in repayment.



“This process will focus on how the Department can rightsize Title IV regulations that have driven up the cost of college and hindered innovation,” said Acting Under Secretary James Bergeron in a statement on Thursday. “Not only will this rulemaking serve as an opportunity to identify and cut unnecessary red tape, but it will allow key stakeholders to offer suggestions to streamline and improve federal student aid programs.”


Here’s what borrowers should know about the Department of Education’s rulemaking notice, and what it may mean for critical student loan forgiveness and repayment programs.


Department Of Education Initiates Process To Change Rules For Student Loan Forgiveness And Repayment​

Negotiated rulemaking is a complicated process mandated by federal law that requires the Department of Education to take a series of steps to update or change federal regulations. The first step in the process is to issue a formal notice to commence negotiated rulemaking, which is what the department did on Thursday. Department officials will then form a committee of stakeholders and hold a series of public hearings to discuss proposed changes. The process culminates in the publication of final regulations.

PROMOTED

“The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Postsecondary Education today announced its intention to commence negotiated rulemaking on various programs authorized under Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965,” said the department’s statement on Thursday. The department indicated it is seeking “ideas to improve the Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program, the Pay As You Earn (PAYE) Repayment plan, and the Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) plan.”

The department’s formal notice of intent to commence negotiated rulemaking confirmed that the focus would be on PSLF, PAYE, and ICR. The department seeks “public feedback, especially addressing topics which may include Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF), Pay As You Earn (PAYE), Income Contingent Repayment (ICR), or other topics that would streamline current federal student financial assistance programs," reads the notice.

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How Student Loan Forgiveness Under PSLF Could Be Targeted Through Rulemaking​

The PSLF program offers student loan forgiveness to borrowers who make payments on their loans for at least 10 years while maintaining employment at qualifying nonprofit or government organizations. The department indicated in its notice of intent to commence negotiated rulemaking that it is looking at “Refining definitions of a qualifying employer for the purposes of determining eligibility for the Public Service Loan Forgiveness program."

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This appears to be a direct reference to President Donald Trump’s executive order issued in March to limit student loan forgiveness eligibility under the PSLF program. The order instructed the Department of Education to “propose revisions” to the regulations governing PSLF to exclude from the definition of “qualifying employment” organizations that “engage in activities that have a substantial illegal purpose.” The order suggests that such organizations could include those that facilitate the violation of federal immigration laws, advocate for or provide gender affirming healthcare for transgender youth, or engage in “illegal discrimination" (which could be a reference to DEI initiatives).






Legal observers and student loan borrower advocacy groups have argued that the somewhat vague definition of “illegal purpose” could effectively ensnare nearly any organization that engages in activities the Trump administration opposes. Such groups have further argued that neither President Trump nor the Department of Education have any authority to narrow the definition of a qualifying employer for PSLF without congressional authorization, and that penalizing organizations based on their mission or activities could run afoul of the U.S. constitution.

“This action is unconstitutional and illegal," said Kristin McGuire, executive director of Young Invincibles, in a statement last month. “Trump can not make major modifications to a program that was written into law by Congress.” McGuire accused Trump of “abusing his power to punish borrowers for ideological reasons and blocking necessary relief that has been mandated for all 501c3 employees by law since 2007,” which is when PSLF was first created.

How Key Student Loan Forgiveness Under ICR And PAYE Could Be Targeted Through Rulemaking​

The Department of Education’s notice is less clear on how Trump administration officials may want to change the ICR and PAYE plans. All the notice says is that “proposed topics for negotiation would include” the ICR and PAYE plans. ICR and PAYE are two income-driven repayment plans that allow borrowers to make affordable payments tied to their income. Borrowers can receive student loan forgiveness of any remaining balance after 20 or 25 years in repayment under those plans.

However, as part of an ongoing legal challenge brought by a group of Republican-led states over the SAVE plan — another income-driven repayment program — the future of student loan forgiveness under ICR and PAYE has already been thrown into doubt. The 8th Circuit Court of Appeals issued a ruling in February that questioned whether Congress intended for there to be loan forgiveness at the end of 20 or 25 years under PAYE and ICR, respectively, despite more than 30 years of regulations, loan contract language, and public assurances made to borrowers by loan servicers and the federal government. It is quite possible that the Department of Education will seek to end student loan forgiveness under these programs, citing the 8th Circuit’s recent decision as the rationale.

Income-Based Repayment, or IBR, is not currently subject to any legal challenge and was established separately by Congress. The department’s notice of intent to commence rulemaking does not reference IBR. Payments made under PAYE and ICR can count toward student loan forgiveness under IBR, so borrowers who wind up getting impacted by changes to program rules can potentially switch plans. However, payments could be more expensive under IBR, and not all borrowers would be eligible to change their repayment plan. And the Trump administration halted all processing for all four income-driven plans in the wake of the 8th Circuit’s recent ruling, leading to a new legal challenge.

What’s Next For Student Loan Forgiveness Rule Changes​

The Department of Education’s issuance of the notice of intent to commence negotiated rulemaking is just the first step in what will be a lengthy process that will likely take more than a year. The next step is the creation of a rulemaking committee comprised of key stakeholders, which will then hold a series of public hearings.

“The Department will also host two public hearings — an in-person meeting on Tuesday, April 29, 2025 and a virtual hearing on Thursday, May 1, 2025,” said the department in its statement on Thursday.

Borrowers who are on track for student loan forgiveness through PSLF, ICR, or PAYE and are concerned about the Department of Education making adverse changes to program rules can submit formal comments through the Federal eRulemaking Portal at Regulations.gov. “The deadline for public comment is 30 days after publication in the Federal Register,” says the department’s statement.
 
Couldn’t vote for Biden who did his best to help mofos with their loans…Cuz he was “Old and Incompetent”.

Couldn’t vote for Harris cuz she “Wasn’t Black” and “Lied”…..

So mofos go and vote for an Old and Incompetent Moron who lies constantly.

You couldn’t make this shit up if you tried.
 
3 likely student loan changes as Trump looks to overhaul $1.6 trillion system

The potential changes could impact how millions of borrowers repay their debt, and who qualifies for loan forgiveness.

Annie Nova
April 10, 2025

 
Huge Changes To Student Loan Repayment Plans Are Coming, And Borrowers Could Pay A Steep Price

The Trump administration, the courts, and Republican lawmakers in Congress are poised to make the most significant changes to federal student loan repayment plans in a generation. If enacted, these reforms could cut off access to affordable payments for millions of borrowers, eliminate student loan forgiveness, and trap people in a lifetime of debt, warn advocates.

ByAdam S. Minsky
Apr 09, 2025


960x0.jpg

Speaker of the US House of Representatives, Mike Johnson (R) and US Representative Virginia Foxx (L) visit Columbia University. Foxx introduced a bill last year that would dramatically reshape federal student loan repayment programs.
 

Education Department clarifies upcoming changes to income-driven loan repayment​

The Department of Education has clarified in court filings that spousal income will not be a factor in income-driven loan payment, which may result in lower payments for some borrowers.


The headquarters of the U.S. Department of Education, March 12, 2025, in Washington.


Photo by: Mark Schiefelbein/AP
FILE - The headquarters of the U.S. Department of Education, March 12, 2025, in Washington.

By: Scripps News Group
Posted 7:03 PM, Apr 16, 2025
The Department of Education amended a student loan payment policy this week that could come as reassurance for some borrowers who were concerned their payments were about to go up.

A court declaration from the department filed in April suggested that people could be required to make higher loan payments if they were both married and making loan payments based on an income-driven repayment plan.

That declaration said that "married borrowers filing separate income tax returns or separated from their spouses will have spousal income counted for the purposes of calculating monthly payment amount under IDR plans, which is a required consequence of the Eighth Circuit’s opinion directing a broadened preliminary injunction."

The Education Department amended that declaration on Wednesday to make clear that spousal income will not be a factor in loan payment.


Now, it reads "married borrowers filing separate income tax returns or separated from their spouses will have the spouse counted in the family size for the purposes of calculating monthly payment amount under IDR plans."

This change means not only will payments not increase, some may actually decrease. Under the rules that govern IDR plans and the SAVE Plan, family size — which may increase if a spouse is counted — is part of the calculation that determines payment amounts.

RELATED STORY | Small Business Administration will take over management of student loans, Trump says

The new filing comes as part of a lawsuit brought in March against the Trump Department of Education. Student borrowers sued after the department took down an online system that let borrowers apply for income-driven repayment. Plaintiffs argued that it wasn't legal to cut off access to those plans.

The department is working to reopen access to the IDR systems. In the latest court filings, officials indicated applications would resume by May 10, 2025.
 
Student-loan borrowers will see Social Security checks, tax refunds disappear over defaulted debt, Trump administration says


The Trump administration is turning on some of the harshest consequences for falling behind on student loans.

Starting on May 5, the government is debt collection on defaulted student loans. As part of these efforts, the Department of Education is restarting the process that allows for borrowers who are in default on their student loans to have their Social Security benefits and tax refunds offset to repay the debt, the U.S. Education Department announced Monday. Early this summer, the government will also begin garnishing wages to repay defaulted student loans.

This will mark the first time in five years — since the collections system was paused as part of the pandemic-era freeze on student-loan payments — that borrowers have faced these consequences for defaulting on student loans (defined as not making a payment on the debt in more than 270 days).
 
Student-loan borrowers will see Social Security checks, tax refunds disappear over defaulted debt, Trump administration says


The Trump administration is turning on some of the harshest consequences for falling behind on student loans.

Starting on May 5, the government is debt collection on defaulted student loans. As part of these efforts, the Department of Education is restarting the process that allows for borrowers who are in default on their student loans to have their Social Security benefits and tax refunds offset to repay the debt, the U.S. Education Department announced Monday. Early this summer, the government will also begin garnishing wages to repay defaulted student loans.

This will mark the first time in five years — since the collections system was paused as part of the pandemic-era freeze on student-loan payments — that borrowers have faced these consequences for defaulting on student loans (defined as not making a payment on the debt in more than 270 days).

Somehow folks will still blame Biden
 
Since Trump and the U.S. Department of Education want to do this shit to get people to pay even when shit is tough and people getting laid off on their jobs.

If people do get a job, find a way to get money under the table to where the system doesn't know you're getting paid being low-key about it.


FUCK TRUMP & U.S. Department of Education putting taxpayers first before the poor.

I say fuck paying them back when you don't have it nor on their time.
 
Student-loan borrowers will see Social Security checks, tax refunds disappear over defaulted debt, Trump administration says


The Trump administration is turning on some of the harshest consequences for falling behind on student loans.

Starting on May 5, the government is debt collection on defaulted student loans. As part of these efforts, the Department of Education is restarting the process that allows for borrowers who are in default on their student loans to have their Social Security benefits and tax refunds offset to repay the debt, the U.S. Education Department announced Monday. Early this summer, the government will also begin garnishing wages to repay defaulted student loans.

This will mark the first time in five years — since the collections system was paused as part of the pandemic-era freeze on student-loan payments — that borrowers have faced these consequences for defaulting on student loans (defined as not making a payment on the debt in more than 270 days).
@850credit

What say you cuz?
 
HomeManage LoansStudent Loan Delinquency and DefaultGetting Out of Default

Don’t get discouraged if you’re in default on your federal student loan.

You have multiple options to get out of default.

On This Page

Compare Your Options
Rehabilitate Your Loans
Consolidate Your Loans
Repay Your Loans in Full
Get Help With Your Defaulted Loans
If you failed to make your payments on your federal student loan and now are in default, don’t let the consequences of default affect your financial future. Find out how to get out of default.
One way to get out of default is to repay the defaulted loan in full, but that's not a practical option for most borrowers. The two main ways to get out of default are

  1. rehabilitating your loan(s), or
  2. consolidating your loan(s).

Compare Your Options

Loan rehabilitation takes several months to complete. But you can quickly apply for loan consolidation.
However, loan rehabilitation provides certain benefits that are not available through loan consolidation. Take a look at the chart below to compare the benefits of loan rehabilitation with the benefits of loan consolidation.
Loan Rehabilitation and Consolidation Comparison Chart
Eligibility for DefermentYesYes
Eligibility for ForbearanceYesYes
Choice of Repayment PlansYesYes (but there may be limitations—see below)
Eligibility for Loan Forgiveness ProgramsYesYes
Eligibility to Receive Federal Student AidYesYes
Removal of the Record of Default From Your Credit HistoryYes (but see below)No (see below for details)
Interest and Collection Costs Are AddedNoYes (see below for details)
[th]
Benefit Regained
[/th]
[th]
Loan Rehabilitation
[/th]
[th]
Loan Consolidation
[/th]

Rehabilitate Your Loans

One option for getting your loan out of default is loan rehabilitation. To start the loan rehabilitation process, you must contact your loan holder. If you’re not sure who your loan holder is, you can log in and view your loan servicer details to get your loan holder’s contact information.
What you need to do to rehabilitate your loan(s) depends on your loan type and who holds your loan. Loans in the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan (Direct Loan) Program and Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) Program have different requirements from loans in the Federal Perkins Loan Program.

Requirements for Direct Loans and FFEL Program Loans

To rehabilitate a defaulted Direct Loan or FFEL Program loan, you must
  • agree in writing to make nine voluntary, reasonable, and affordable monthly payments (as determined by your loan holder) within 20 days of the due date, and
  • make all nine payments during a period of 10 consecutive months.
What is a reasonable monthly payment amount?
How do I rehabilitate an ED-held loan?
What can I do if I can’t afford the monthly payment amount in my agreement?

Depending on your income, your monthly payment under a loan rehabilitation agreement could be as low as $5.

Collections During Loan Rehabilitation

Your loan holder may be collecting payments on your defaulted loan through wage garnishment or Treasury offset (taking all or part of your tax refunds or other government payments). These involuntary payments may continue even after you begin making payments under a loan rehabilitation agreement, but they can’t be counted toward the required nine voluntary loan rehabilitation payments.
Involuntary payments may continue to be taken until your loan is no longer in default or until you have made at least five of your rehabilitation payments.
Once you have made the required nine payments, your loans will no longer be in default.

Requirements for Perkins Loans

To rehabilitate a defaulted Federal Perkins Loan, you must make a full monthly payment
  • each month,
  • within 20 days of the due date,
  • for nine consecutive months.
Your required monthly payment amount is determined by your loan holder. Find out where to go for information about your Perkins Loan.

Benefits of Loan Rehabilitation

When your loan is rehabilitated, the default status will be removed from your loan, and collection of payments through wage garnishment or Treasury offset will stop.
You’ll regain eligibility for benefits that were available on the loan before you defaulted, such as deferment, forbearance, a choice of repayment plans, and loan forgiveness. And you’ll be eligible to receive federal student aid again.
Also, the record of default on the rehabilitated loan will be removed from your credit history. However, your credit history will still show late payments that were reported by your loan holder before the loan went into default.
If you rehabilitate a defaulted loan and then default on that loan again, you can’t rehabilitate it a second time. Rehabilitation is a one-time opportunity.

Consolidate Your Loans

Another way to get out of default is to consolidate your defaulted federal student loan into a Direct Consolidation Loan. Loan consolidation allows you to pay off one or more federal student loans with a new consolidation loan.
Keep in mind that when you consolidate a loan, your accrued interest gets added to the principal balance. Then you’ll get charged future interest on a higher balance, which could cause you to pay more overall (compared to other options for getting out of default). Learn more about consolidation.

Apply to Consolidate

To consolidate a defaulted federal student loan into a new Direct Consolidation Loan, you must either
  • agree to repay the new Direct Consolidation Loan under an income-driven repayment (IDR) plan, or
  • make three consecutive, voluntary, on-time, full monthly payments on the defaulted loan before you consolidate it.
Note: If you choose to make three payments on the defaulted loan before you consolidate it, the required payment amount will be determined by your loan holder. But the payment amount cannot be more than what is reasonable and affordable based on your total financial circumstances.
There are special considerations if you want to reconsolidate an existing Direct Consolidation Loan or Federal (FFEL) Consolidation Loan that is in default:

Reconsolidate a Defaulted Direct Consolidation Loan
Reconsolidate a Defaulted FFEL Consolidation Loan

Impact on Credit History

If you consolidate a defaulted loan, the record of the default (as well as late payments reported before the loan went into default) will remain in your credit history. Late payments will remain on your credit report for seven years from when they were first reported.

Wage Garnishment or Court Orders

If you want to consolidate a defaulted loan that is being collected through garnishment of your wages or that is being collected in accordance with a court order after a judgment was obtained against you, you cannot consolidate the loan unless the wage garnishment order has been lifted or the judgment has been vacated.

Repayment Plans After Consolidating

If you choose to repay the new Direct Consolidation Loan under an IDR plan, you must select one of the available IDR plans at the time you apply for the consolidation loan and provide documentation of your income.
Note: If you want to consolidate a defaulted PLUS loan that you obtained as a parent to pay for your child’s education, the only IDR plan you can choose is the Income-Contingent Repayment Plan (ICR).
If you choose to make three consecutive, voluntary, on-time, full monthly payments on your defaulted loan before you consolidate it, you may repay the new Direct Consolidation Loan under any repayment plan you are eligible for.
After your defaulted loan has been consolidated, your Direct Consolidation Loan will be eligible for benefits such as deferment, forbearance, and loan forgiveness. You’ll also be eligible to receive additional federal student aid. But unlike loan rehabilitation, consolidation of a defaulted loan does not remove the record of the default from your credit history.

Learn More About Consolidation

Repay Your Loans in Full

A third option for getting out of default is to repay the full amount of your defaulted student loan.
If you need your loan holder’s contact information to make a payment, log in and view your loan servicer details.

Get Help With Your Defaulted Loans

If you need help with your defaulted loan, you will need to contact the holder of your defaulted loan. To find out who holds your loan, log in and view your loan servicer details.
Note: StudentAid.gov does not include information about any private student loans you may have received. Contact the loan holder of your private student loans for loan information.
If you are contacted by a company asking you to pay "enrollment," "subscription," or "maintenance" fees to help you get out of default, you should walk away. Your loan holder will help you with your defaulted loan for free.
Want to learn more? See our “3 Ways to Spot a Student Aid Scam” or find more detailed information on avoiding student aid scams.
 
HomeManage LoansStudent Loan Delinquency and DefaultGetting Out of Default

Don’t get discouraged if you’re in default on your federal student loan.


You have multiple options to get out of default.

On This Page

Compare Your Options
Rehabilitate Your Loans
Consolidate Your Loans
Repay Your Loans in Full
Get Help With Your Defaulted Loans
If you failed to make your payments on your federal student loan and now are in default, don’t let the consequences of default affect your financial future. Find out how to get out of default.

One way to get out of default is to repay the defaulted loan in full, but that's not a practical option for most borrowers. The two main ways to get out of default are

  1. rehabilitating your loan(s), or
  2. consolidating your loan(s).

Compare Your Options

Loan rehabilitation takes several months to complete. But you can quickly apply for loan consolidation.
However, loan rehabilitation provides certain benefits that are not available through loan consolidation. Take a look at the chart below to compare the benefits of loan rehabilitation with the benefits of loan consolidation.
Loan Rehabilitation and Consolidation Comparison Chart


Eligibility for DefermentYesYes
Eligibility for ForbearanceYesYes
Choice of Repayment PlansYesYes (but there may be limitations—see below)
Eligibility for Loan Forgiveness ProgramsYesYes
Eligibility to Receive Federal Student AidYesYes
Removal of the Record of Default From Your Credit HistoryYes (but see below)No (see below for details)
Interest and Collection Costs Are AddedNoYes (see below for details)

[th]
Benefit Regained


[/th]
[th]
Loan Rehabilitation

[/th]
[th]
Loan Consolidation

[/th]​

Rehabilitate Your Loans

One option for getting your loan out of default is loan rehabilitation. To start the loan rehabilitation process, you must contact your loan holder. If you’re not sure who your loan holder is, you can log in and view your loan servicer details to get your loan holder’s contact information.
What you need to do to rehabilitate your loan(s) depends on your loan type and who holds your loan. Loans in the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan (Direct Loan) Program and Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) Program have different requirements from loans in the Federal Perkins Loan Program.

Requirements for Direct Loans and FFEL Program Loans

To rehabilitate a defaulted Direct Loan or FFEL Program loan, you must

  • agree in writing to make nine voluntary, reasonable, and affordable monthly payments (as determined by your loan holder) within 20 days of the due date, and
  • make all nine payments during a period of 10 consecutive months.
What is a reasonable monthly payment amount?
How do I rehabilitate an ED-held loan?
What can I do if I can’t afford the monthly payment amount in my agreement?

Depending on your income, your monthly payment under a loan rehabilitation agreement could be as low as $5.


Collections During Loan Rehabilitation

Your loan holder may be collecting payments on your defaulted loan through wage garnishment or Treasury offset (taking all or part of your tax refunds or other government payments). These involuntary payments may continue even after you begin making payments under a loan rehabilitation agreement, but they can’t be counted toward the required nine voluntary loan rehabilitation payments.
Involuntary payments may continue to be taken until your loan is no longer in default or until you have made at least five of your rehabilitation payments.
Once you have made the required nine payments, your loans will no longer be in default.


Requirements for Perkins Loans

To rehabilitate a defaulted Federal Perkins Loan, you must make a full monthly payment

  • each month,
  • within 20 days of the due date,
  • for nine consecutive months.
Your required monthly payment amount is determined by your loan holder. Find out where to go for information about your Perkins Loan.

Benefits of Loan Rehabilitation

When your loan is rehabilitated, the default status will be removed from your loan, and collection of payments through wage garnishment or Treasury offset will stop.
You’ll regain eligibility for benefits that were available on the loan before you defaulted, such as deferment, forbearance, a choice of repayment plans, and loan forgiveness. And you’ll be eligible to receive federal student aid again.
Also, the record of default on the rehabilitated loan will be removed from your credit history. However, your credit history will still show late payments that were reported by your loan holder before the loan went into default.
If you rehabilitate a defaulted loan and then default on that loan again, you can’t rehabilitate it a second time. Rehabilitation is a one-time opportunity.


Consolidate Your Loans

Another way to get out of default is to consolidate your defaulted federal student loan into a Direct Consolidation Loan. Loan consolidation allows you to pay off one or more federal student loans with a new consolidation loan.
Keep in mind that when you consolidate a loan, your accrued interest gets added to the principal balance. Then you’ll get charged future interest on a higher balance, which could cause you to pay more overall (compared to other options for getting out of default). Learn more about consolidation.

Apply to Consolidate

To consolidate a defaulted federal student loan into a new Direct Consolidation Loan, you must either

  • agree to repay the new Direct Consolidation Loan under an income-driven repayment (IDR) plan, or
  • make three consecutive, voluntary, on-time, full monthly payments on the defaulted loan before you consolidate it.
Note: If you choose to make three payments on the defaulted loan before you consolidate it, the required payment amount will be determined by your loan holder. But the payment amount cannot be more than what is reasonable and affordable based on your total financial circumstances.
There are special considerations if you want to reconsolidate an existing Direct Consolidation Loan or Federal (FFEL) Consolidation Loan that is in default:
Reconsolidate a Defaulted Direct Consolidation Loan
Reconsolidate a Defaulted FFEL Consolidation Loan


Impact on Credit History

If you consolidate a defaulted loan, the record of the default (as well as late payments reported before the loan went into default) will remain in your credit history. Late payments will remain on your credit report for seven years from when they were first reported.

Wage Garnishment or Court Orders

If you want to consolidate a defaulted loan that is being collected through garnishment of your wages or that is being collected in accordance with a court order after a judgment was obtained against you, you cannot consolidate the loan unless the wage garnishment order has been lifted or the judgment has been vacated.

Repayment Plans After Consolidating

If you choose to repay the new Direct Consolidation Loan under an IDR plan, you must select one of the available IDR plans at the time you apply for the consolidation loan and provide documentation of your income.
Note: If you want to consolidate a defaulted PLUS loan that you obtained as a parent to pay for your child’s education, the only IDR plan you can choose is the Income-Contingent Repayment Plan (ICR).
If you choose to make three consecutive, voluntary, on-time, full monthly payments on your defaulted loan before you consolidate it, you may repay the new Direct Consolidation Loan under any repayment plan you are eligible for.
After your defaulted loan has been consolidated, your Direct Consolidation Loan will be eligible for benefits such as deferment, forbearance, and loan forgiveness. You’ll also be eligible to receive additional federal student aid. But unlike loan rehabilitation, consolidation of a defaulted loan does not remove the record of the default from your credit history.


Learn More About Consolidation

Repay Your Loans in Full

A third option for getting out of default is to repay the full amount of your defaulted student loan.
If you need your loan holder’s contact information to make a payment, log in and view your loan servicer details.

Get Help With Your Defaulted Loans

If you need help with your defaulted loan, you will need to contact the holder of your defaulted loan. To find out who holds your loan, log in and view your loan servicer details.
Note: StudentAid.gov does not include information about any private student loans you may have received. Contact the loan holder of your private student loans for loan information.
If you are contacted by a company asking you to pay "enrollment," "subscription," or "maintenance" fees to help you get out of default, you should walk away. Your loan holder will help you with your defaulted loan for free.
Want to learn more? See our “3 Ways to Spot a Student Aid Scam” or find more detailed information on avoiding student aid scams.
This is assuming Trump won't blow all these options out the water
 
Could happen, but this information is directly from the student loan. gov website. I think these are the options for people with loans, but the SAVE program will no longer be avaiable. From what I've read, anyone that is in default needs to enroll into one of these programs or face having their wages defaulted on...




This is assuming Trump won't blow all these options out the water
HomeManage LoansStudent Loan Delinquency and DefaultGetting Out of Default

Don’t get discouraged if you’re in default on your federal student loan.


You have multiple options to get out of default.

On This Page

Compare Your Options
Rehabilitate Your Loans
Consolidate Your Loans
Repay Your Loans in Full
Get Help With Your Defaulted Loans
If you failed to make your payments on your federal student loan and now are in default, don’t let the consequences of default affect your financial future. Find out how to get out of default.

One way to get out of default is to repay the defaulted loan in full, but that's not a practical option for most borrowers. The two main ways to get out of default are

  1. rehabilitating your loan(s), or
  2. consolidating your loan(s).

Compare Your Options

Loan rehabilitation takes several months to complete. But you can quickly apply for loan consolidation.
However, loan rehabilitation provides certain benefits that are not available through loan consolidation. Take a look at the chart below to compare the benefits of loan rehabilitation with the benefits of loan consolidation.
Loan Rehabilitation and Consolidation Comparison Chart


Eligibility for DefermentYesYes
Eligibility for ForbearanceYesYes
Choice of Repayment PlansYesYes (but there may be limitations—see below)
Eligibility for Loan Forgiveness ProgramsYesYes
Eligibility to Receive Federal Student AidYesYes
Removal of the Record of Default From Your Credit HistoryYes (but see below)No (see below for details)
Interest and Collection Costs Are AddedNoYes (see below for details)

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Benefit Regained


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Loan Rehabilitation

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Loan Consolidation

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Rehabilitate Your Loans

One option for getting your loan out of default is loan rehabilitation. To start the loan rehabilitation process, you must contact your loan holder. If you’re not sure who your loan holder is, you can log in and view your loan servicer details to get your loan holder’s contact information.
What you need to do to rehabilitate your loan(s) depends on your loan type and who holds your loan. Loans in the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan (Direct Loan) Program and Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) Program have different requirements from loans in the Federal Perkins Loan Program.

Requirements for Direct Loans and FFEL Program Loans

To rehabilitate a defaulted Direct Loan or FFEL Program loan, you must

  • agree in writing to make nine voluntary, reasonable, and affordable monthly payments (as determined by your loan holder) within 20 days of the due date, and
  • make all nine payments during a period of 10 consecutive months.
What is a reasonable monthly payment amount?
How do I rehabilitate an ED-held loan?
What can I do if I can’t afford the monthly payment amount in my agreement?

Depending on your income, your monthly payment under a loan rehabilitation agreement could be as low as $5.


Collections During Loan Rehabilitation

Your loan holder may be collecting payments on your defaulted loan through wage garnishment or Treasury offset (taking all or part of your tax refunds or other government payments). These involuntary payments may continue even after you begin making payments under a loan rehabilitation agreement, but they can’t be counted toward the required nine voluntary loan rehabilitation payments.
Involuntary payments may continue to be taken until your loan is no longer in default or until you have made at least five of your rehabilitation payments.
Once you have made the required nine payments, your loans will no longer be in default.


Requirements for Perkins Loans

To rehabilitate a defaulted Federal Perkins Loan, you must make a full monthly payment

  • each month,
  • within 20 days of the due date,
  • for nine consecutive months.
Your required monthly payment amount is determined by your loan holder. Find out where to go for information about your Perkins Loan.

Benefits of Loan Rehabilitation

When your loan is rehabilitated, the default status will be removed from your loan, and collection of payments through wage garnishment or Treasury offset will stop.
You’ll regain eligibility for benefits that were available on the loan before you defaulted, such as deferment, forbearance, a choice of repayment plans, and loan forgiveness. And you’ll be eligible to receive federal student aid again.
Also, the record of default on the rehabilitated loan will be removed from your credit history. However, your credit history will still show late payments that were reported by your loan holder before the loan went into default.
If you rehabilitate a defaulted loan and then default on that loan again, you can’t rehabilitate it a second time. Rehabilitation is a one-time opportunity.


Consolidate Your Loans

Another way to get out of default is to consolidate your defaulted federal student loan into a Direct Consolidation Loan. Loan consolidation allows you to pay off one or more federal student loans with a new consolidation loan.
Keep in mind that when you consolidate a loan, your accrued interest gets added to the principal balance. Then you’ll get charged future interest on a higher balance, which could cause you to pay more overall (compared to other options for getting out of default). Learn more about consolidation.

Apply to Consolidate

To consolidate a defaulted federal student loan into a new Direct Consolidation Loan, you must either

  • agree to repay the new Direct Consolidation Loan under an income-driven repayment (IDR) plan, or
  • make three consecutive, voluntary, on-time, full monthly payments on the defaulted loan before you consolidate it.
Note: If you choose to make three payments on the defaulted loan before you consolidate it, the required payment amount will be determined by your loan holder. But the payment amount cannot be more than what is reasonable and affordable based on your total financial circumstances.
There are special considerations if you want to reconsolidate an existing Direct Consolidation Loan or Federal (FFEL) Consolidation Loan that is in default:
Reconsolidate a Defaulted Direct Consolidation Loan
Reconsolidate a Defaulted FFEL Consolidation Loan


Impact on Credit History

If you consolidate a defaulted loan, the record of the default (as well as late payments reported before the loan went into default) will remain in your credit history. Late payments will remain on your credit report for seven years from when they were first reported.

Wage Garnishment or Court Orders

If you want to consolidate a defaulted loan that is being collected through garnishment of your wages or that is being collected in accordance with a court order after a judgment was obtained against you, you cannot consolidate the loan unless the wage garnishment order has been lifted or the judgment has been vacated.

Repayment Plans After Consolidating

If you choose to repay the new Direct Consolidation Loan under an IDR plan, you must select one of the available IDR plans at the time you apply for the consolidation loan and provide documentation of your income.
Note: If you want to consolidate a defaulted PLUS loan that you obtained as a parent to pay for your child’s education, the only IDR plan you can choose is the Income-Contingent Repayment Plan (ICR).
If you choose to make three consecutive, voluntary, on-time, full monthly payments on your defaulted loan before you consolidate it, you may repay the new Direct Consolidation Loan under any repayment plan you are eligible for.
After your defaulted loan has been consolidated, your Direct Consolidation Loan will be eligible for benefits such as deferment, forbearance, and loan forgiveness. You’ll also be eligible to receive additional federal student aid. But unlike loan rehabilitation, consolidation of a defaulted loan does not remove the record of the default from your credit history.


Learn More About Consolidation

Repay Your Loans in Full

A third option for getting out of default is to repay the full amount of your defaulted student loan.
If you need your loan holder’s contact information to make a payment, log in and view your loan servicer details.

Get Help With Your Defaulted Loans

If you need help with your defaulted loan, you will need to contact the holder of your defaulted loan. To find out who holds your loan, log in and view your loan servicer details.
Note: StudentAid.gov does not include information about any private student loans you may have received. Contact the loan holder of your private student loans for loan information.
If you are contacted by a company asking you to pay "enrollment," "subscription," or "maintenance" fees to help you get out of default, you should walk away. Your loan holder will help you with your defaulted loan for free.
Want to learn more? See our “3 Ways to Spot a Student Aid Scam” or find more detailed information on avoiding student aid scams.
 
Could happen, but this information is directly from the student loan. gov website. I think these are the options for people with loans, but the SAVE program will no longer be avaiable. From what I've read, anyone that is in default needs to enroll into one of these programs or face having their wages defaulted on...


So everyone that was already enrolled in SAVE, they just put them back in the general pool of account holders?
 
So everyone that was already enrolled in SAVE, they just put them back in the general pool of account holders?
Still being debated, but not looking good.


To make matters more complicated, some 8 million borrowers are still waiting to find out if their repayment plan is even legal. The Biden administration's plan known as SAVE, which bases a person's monthly student loan payments on how much money they make, is currently tied up in the courts.
"That's all happening at the same time as Secretary McMahon is trying to restart the debt collection machine," Pierce says. "So we're worried that borrowers are not going to have a full set of options that help them afford their payments and are going to have no choice but to sit still and watch their Social Security be seized, watch their wages get garnished."
 
After 19 Years Of Payments, A Man Asks Dave Ramsey About His Student Loan Forgiveness. At $90K A Year, Ramsey Doesn't Go Easy On Him

“The program is: cut your lifestyle and pay this off in 12 months,” he told the caller, who earns $90,000 a year. “Live on $70,000 minus taxes and pay this off in one year, and that means you're not going out to eat, and it means you're not going on vacation.”

Adrian Volenik
April 21, 2025


…Ramsey knew exactly who was to blame for the student debt mess. In his words, “The whole stupid thing is a scam. Higher education is to blame. Congress is to blame. Weak parents that won't tell their spoiled freaking children ‘no’ are to blame.”

He added that if student loans are so harmful that we need to forgive them, then Congress should stop offering them altogether. “That'd be an awesome thing,” Ramsey quipped. Cruze also added that the universities would probably lower tuition because nobody could afford it...

54a2fe9969bedd7e400e8372
 
Couldn’t vote for Biden who did his best to help mofos with their loans…Cuz he was “Old and Incompetent”.

Couldn’t vote for Harris cuz she “Wasn’t Black” and “Lied”…..

So mofos go and vote for an Old and Incompetent Moron who lies constantly.

You couldn’t make this shit up if you tried.
CACs and hispanics...shit everyone not black, gonna do what they do. They didn't surprise me My biggest beef was with them goofy barbershop (think they smart, but actually dumb as a brick) ass negroes. People actually look up to these dumb ass dudes and they dropped the fkn ball tryna be like whitey.
 
New thread title: "850credit doesn't want to update his thread to reflect facts because it's too hard "
Especially, when Biden is no longer the president nor in charge anymore.

I thought earlier the thread title should change.

But keeping it actually makes sense, it reminds people that Biden did try to help mofos, but they believed the narrative that he was “Old and Incompetent” and voted for a “Old and Incompetent” Orange Moron.
 
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