logo
The Department of Education has paused certain student loan forgiveness. Here's what you need to know

The Department of Education has paused certain student loan forgiveness. Here's what you need to know

CNN18 hours ago
The US Department of Education has halted the cancellation of student loans in Income-Based Repayment plans, prompting concern among borrowers that their loans will not be forgiven anytime soon.
The department posted a notice of the pause in an FAQ on its Federal Student Aid website earlier this month, saying that it needs to address a federal court order that affects income-driven repayment plans.
'Currently, IBR forgiveness is paused while our systems are updated to accurately count months not affected by the court's injunction. IBR forgiveness will resume once those updates are completed,' the department wrote.
The department noted that forgiveness in other income-driven repayment plans are paused, but it will continue to 'process loan forgiveness for the IBR Plan, which was separately enacted by Congress' in the future.
The pause comes at a time of major change for the nation's student loan system that has rattled some borrowers. Interest will start accruing on August 1 for millions of borrowers in Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plans, a Biden-era income-driven repayment option that has been blocked by the federal court order, even as payment remain halted. And President Donald Trump's 'big, beautiful bill' contains a major overhaul of student loan repayment plans and borrowing rules.
The roughly 2 million borrowers in IBR plans are eligible to have their loans forgiven after either 20 or 25 years of payments, depending on when the loans were taken out. But calculating whether borrowers have made enough payments to qualify for forgiveness has been an issue for several years.
Also, the Biden administration made several changes to the IBR plan forgiveness program, including counting the months that loan payments were deferred for economic hardship reasons or paused in forbearance toward payment requirement.
The court's order affected certain of the Biden administration's regulatory changes that pertain to the IBR plans, including the expanded set of deferments and forbearances that count toward forgiveness, said Mark Kantrowitz, a longtime student loan expert.
Borrowers, however, are worried that the Trump administration — which has not been supportive of loan forgiveness programs in the past — may 'slow walk' the loan discharges, Kantrowitz said. They must continue repaying their loans until the Department of Education determines they have met the criteria to have their loans discharged.
'Borrowers who qualify for forgiveness want to receive their forgiveness,' he said.
The department says that it needs to temporarily suspend the IBR plan forgiveness program to implement the court ruling.
'Legal IBR discharges will resume as soon as the Department is able to establish the correct payment count,' Ellen Keast, the agency's deputy press secretary, said in a statement to CNN. 'For any borrower that makes a payment after the date of borrower eligibility, the Department will refund overpayments when the discharges resume.'
While the department did not respond to CNN's question about when IBR plan forgiveness will resume, Scott Buchanan, executive director of the Student Loan Servicing Alliance, said he doesn't think the pause will last long.
Still, another reason eligible borrowers are concerned about the pause is that loans canceled after January 1 are set to be counted as income for tax purposes, said Aissa Canchola Banez, policy director at the Student Borrower Protection Center, an advocacy group. That's because the Republican-led Congress did not extend a Biden-era provision that made such cancellations tax exempt and is scheduled to expire at year's end.
'This delay can force folks to ultimately get to that date in which they could potentially see a tax bill,' she said.
The department, which has laid off a sizable number of its staff, is already contending with a large backlog of roughly 1.5 million applications from borrowers seeking to switch into different income-driven repayment plans, Kantrowitz said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Federal appeals court rules Trump birthright citizenship order unconstitutional
Federal appeals court rules Trump birthright citizenship order unconstitutional

USA Today

time28 minutes ago

  • USA Today

Federal appeals court rules Trump birthright citizenship order unconstitutional

A federal appeals court affirmed on July 23 a district court ruling that said President Donald Trump's executive order seeking to limit birthright citizenship is unconstitutional. The opinion from the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals was written by Ronald M. Gould, a Clinton appointee, and included a partial dissent from Patrick J. Bumatay, a first-term Trump appointee. "The district court correctly concluded that the Executive Order's proposed interpretation, denying citizenship to many persons born in the United States, is unconstitutional. We fully agree," the ruling reads. The lawsuit was filed by the states of Washington, Arizona, Illinois and Oregon in response to Trump's day-one executive order. The opinion follows a July 10 ruling made by U.S. District Judge Joseph Laplante that barred enforcement of the order after immigrant rights advocates filed a class action lawsuit in the wake of a Supreme Court ruling that restricted the ability of judges to block his policies using nationwide injunctions. This is a developing story.

Bloomberg Australia: Inside Trump's New Crypto Push
Bloomberg Australia: Inside Trump's New Crypto Push

Bloomberg

time28 minutes ago

  • Bloomberg

Bloomberg Australia: Inside Trump's New Crypto Push

Bitcoin just hit a record above $123,000 and crypto is suddenly back in the headlines. A major new US law backing stablecoins has sent digital assets soaring, and it's tied directly to Donald Trump's renewed push to make crypto part of the political mainstream. While Bitcoin itself isn't covered by the legislation, the broader mood shift has given the whole sector a boost - and Aussie investors are watching closely. This week on the Bloomberg Australia Podcast, host Rebecca Jones speaks with cross-asset reporter Richard Henderson about what this new wave of momentum really means. From ETFs and super fund exposure to why stablecoins matter more than you might think, they break down how crypto is evolving, what's driving the surge - and whether this marks a shift toward digital assets going truly mainstream.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store