WASHINGTON – Advocates with the National Consumer Law Center’s Student Loan Borrower Assistance Project applaud action today by the Department of Education to begin automatically discharging $39 billion in Federal student loans–helping more than 804,000 borrowers get out from under crushing student debt. But advocates warn more must be done to assist borrowers who’ve fallen behind and defaulted on repayment.
“Soon, nearly a million people who have been paying their federal student loans for over two decades will finally be able to move on with their lives without the burden of student debt,” said Abby Shafroth, co-director of advocacy at the National Consumer Law Center and director of its Student Loan Borrower Assistance Project. “This action is the result of long-overdue fixes to structural failures in the student loan system that prevented borrowers from actually getting the relief promised by law.”
Borrowers will be eligible for this relief if they have accumulated the equivalent of 20 or 25 years of qualifying months of student loan payments under income-driven repayment (IDR) plans. Eligible borrowers will be informed by the Department starting today that they qualify for forgiveness without further action on their part and discharges are set to begin 30 days after notification.
“We applaud Secretary Cardona and the Biden Administration for helping right this wrong, and the many borrowers who spoke up and shared their stories, but the work must continue. Roughly 3 million more borrowers who have been in debt for the same amount of time, many of whom have fallen into default, are still waiting for their promised relief,” Shafroth added. “Many borrowers that wound up in default are very low income and have encountered servicing errors and system failures. We will continue to work with the Administration to ensure these borrowers are not left behind.”
Additional resources
- NCLC’s Student Loan Borrower Assistance website
- NCLC and SBPC, A Major Flaw in the IDR Account Adjustment: Excluding Time in Default, June 2023
- Proposed Changes to Income-Driven Repayment Improve Student Loan Affordability, But Problems Remain, January 2023
- The System is Still Broken: 115+ Organizations Renew Push for Overdue Reforms to Income-Driven Repayment (IDR), April 2022
- NCLC/SBPC/CRL Issue Brief: Restoring the Promise of Income-Driven Repayment: An IDR Waiver Program Proposal, Jan. 12, 2022
- NCLC/SBPC Blog: Explosive New Evidence of Mismanagement of Student Loan Program Shows Need for IDR Waiver, April 2021
- Policy Brief: Education Department’s Decades-Old Debt Trap: How the Mismanagement of Income-Driven Repayment Locked Millions in Debt, March 2021
Support NCLC
Please support NCLC's work to advance consumer rights and economic justice with a tax-deductible contribution today!
Donate