Decoding Student Loan Forgiveness: On Friday, July 14, the Biden administration announced that the debt of over 800,000 borrowers owing $39 billion in federal student loans would be forgiven. The Department of Education announced that, beginning today, it will begin informing borrowers about the impending cancellation of their debts.
Two weeks have passed since the Supreme Court pronounced the Biden administration’s plan for widespread student loan forgiveness unconstitutional. This proposal would have allowed more than 40 million students to have debts of up to $20,000 forgiven.
The Biden administration’s initiative to strengthen income-driven repayment plans (IDRs), which seek to reduce monthly student loan payments by tying the payment amount to an individual’s income, is related to the plan introduced on Friday.
Who is Eligible for Loan Cancellation?
According to the Biden administration, 804,000 individuals will receive notification that their debt has been forgiven. According to the administration, these individuals have accumulated the equivalent of twenty or twenty-five years’ worth of eligible monthly payments.
Why are they currently receiving loan forgiveness?
The administration claimed that it is currently repaying the loans to resolve “historical failures” in the management of IDRs. Several “qualifying payments made under IDR plans that should have moved borrowers closer to forgiveness were not accounted for,” as stated by the administration.
U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona stated in the announcement, “For far too long, borrowers fell through the cracks of a broken system that failed to keep accurate track of their progress towards loan forgiveness.”
What Became of Income-Based Repayment Plans?
According to the Higher Education Act and Department of Education regulations, a borrower is eligible for loan forgiveness after making 240 or 300 monthly payments under an IDR or conventional repayment plan. A variable number of months will apply based on the date of the initial loan, the type of loan, and the IDR plan the borrower is enrolled in.
The government noted, however, that “inaccurate payment counts” meant that some borrowers were not making progress towards loan forgiveness.
6 reasons why loan applications are rejected and how to fix them
Which Loan Types Are Covered?
Federal Family Education Loan, Parent PLUS Loan, and Direct Loan applicants are all covered by this policy.
Check out the links we’ve provided below for more recent information:
How is the Duration of Time Determined?
According to the Education Department, it is determining the forgiveness threshold for those who obtained IDR forgiveness credit for any of the following time periods:
- Any payment made in a month while in repayment status, regardless of whether it was partial or late.
- Any period in which a borrower has been in forbearance for a minimum of one year.
- Any month in forbearance for borrowers with at least 36 months of forbearance.
- Any month spent in deferment prior to 2013, excluding months spent in school.
- After January 1, 2013, any month spent due to economic hardship or military deferment will be deducted from
- Prior to loan consolidation, any months in the aforementioned categories will also contribute towards forgiveness.