Current:Home > Contact804,000 long-term borrowers are having their student loans forgiven before payments resume this fall -FutureProof Finance
804,000 long-term borrowers are having their student loans forgiven before payments resume this fall
TrendPulse Quantitative Think Tank Center View
Date:2025-04-08 15:13:24
NEW YORK (AP) — Karin Engstrom thought she’d be paying off her federal student loans for the rest of her life. The 82-year-old was shocked when she logged on to check her balance ahead of payments resuming in October and found that more than $175,000 in debt had been erased.
She’s one of 804,000 borrowers who will have a total of $39 billion forgiven under a one-time adjustment granted by the Biden administration. It’s for people in income-driven repayment plans who have been paying back loans for 20 or 25 years but who never received credit for late or partial payments. It also credits borrowers for periods before the pandemic when they were allowed to pause or reduce payments due to financial hardships.
To correct mistakes by loan servicers, the Department of Education is retroactively adjusting accounts, resulting in forgiveness. The department says 95% of those who qualify have now been informed of the cancellation.
Engstrom didn’t immediately believe it when she saw her balances had been erased, but she eventually found a letter from the Federal Student Aid office dated August 28 that confirmed the cancellation was real.
“Info: Your student loans have been forgiven,” the letter read. “Congratulations! The Biden-Harris Administration has forgiven your federal student loan(s) listed below with Edfinancial Services in full.”
The letter listed two original federal loan amounts of $30,067.45 and $45,729.97 — now gone, along with accumulated interest that more than doubled her total.
Like many borrowers who now qualify for cancellation, she had paid on them for decades, but had never received relief because of administrative and servicer errors.
“I didn’t realize what a lift I would get,” Engstrom said, of the moment of realization. “I thought it would be forgiven when I died.”
Engstrom worked until recently as a substitute teacher and teacher’s aide, and had previously been a professional photographer.
“It was a burden,” she said, of the debt. “I couldn’t think of it all the time. It was just there in the background.”
Patricia Vener-Saavedra, 70, an artist based in Hamden, Connecticut, had more than $88,000 forgiven.
“It’s a relief it’s no longer hanging over me,” she said, adding that it means “hope for everyone else, that they can get out of this situation.”
She worries, though, about her nephew, who’s looking to go to college part-time, which means he’ll be taking out private loans, rather than public ones.
“He’s going to get himself into the situation we’re all trying to get out of,” she said.
Vener-Saavedra said her debt had made it difficult for her to build credit or get a loan to buy a car in recent years. Attempting to get a mortgage, she eventually turned to a “fly-by-night” company and asked her sister to act as a co-signer, which affected her sister’s credit, she said.
“I looked into getting a different mortgage, now that my loans are gone,” she said, “but the rates are so high, it doesn’t make sense.”
The White House has said it will continue to contact borrowers who qualify for cancellation based on their income-driven payment counts through the end of the year, every other month, as new borrowers become eligible. Here’s what to know about the cancellation:
WHO QUALIFIES?
Borrowers who have made 20 or 25 years of qualifying payments (depending on the repayment plan) qualify, if they hold direct loans or Federal Family Education Loans with the Education Department, including borrowers with Parent PLUS loans.
WHEN WILL THESE BORROWERS RECEIVE FORGIVENESS?
The Education Department said it will continue to inform borrowers who qualify through the end of this year, and that discharges of the debts will take place roughly 30 days after those emails are sent. If you received an email or letter in August, for example, your loan balances should go to zero in September.
WHAT IF I’M WAITING FOR AN UPDATED PAYMENT COUNT TO DETERMINE IF I QUALIFY?
The Department of Education has said it will continue to update borrowers’ payment counts once they have processed loan cancellation for borrowers already eligible for debt forgiveness based on their current payment counts.
WHERE CAN I LEARN MORE?
The official Federal Student Aid guide to the Income Driven Repayment adjustment is a good resource for updates.
___
The Associated Press receives support from Charles Schwab Foundation for educational and explanatory reporting to improve financial literacy. The independent foundation is separate from Charles Schwab and Co. Inc. The AP is solely responsible for its journalism.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Irish police arrest 34 people in Dublin rioting following stabbings outside a school
- Sweet potato memories: love 'em, rely on 'em ... hate 'em
- Week 13 college football predictions: Our picks for Ohio State-Michigan, every Top 25 game
- A White House order claims to end 'censorship.' What does that mean?
- UConn guard Azzi Fudd will miss remainder of the season with a knee injury
- Olympic runner Oscar Pistorius up for parole Friday, 10 years after a killing that shocked the world
- Buffalo Sabres rookie Zach Benson scores first goal on highlight-reel, between-the-legs shot
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Watch this darling toddler run for the first time, straight into her military dad's arms
Ranking
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Could cellphone evidence be the key to solving Stephen Smith's cold case?
- You can make some of former first lady Rosalynn Carter's favorite recipes: Strawberry cake
- Inmate dies after being attacked by other prisoners at California max-security lockup, officials say
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- To save the climate, the oil and gas sector must slash planet-warming operations, report says
- World's richest 1% emitting enough carbon to cause heat-related deaths for 1.3 million people, report finds
- The anti-Black Friday: How else to spend the day after Thanksgiving, from hiking to baking
Recommendation
Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
Bruce Willis' Wife Emma Shares Throwback Blended Family Photo on Thanksgiving 2023
Coach Outlet’s Black Friday Sale Is Here: Shop All Their Iconic Bags Up to 85% Off
Hungary set to receive millions in EU money despite Orban’s threats to veto Ukraine aid
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
Israel drawn to face Iceland in Euro 2024 playoffs, then would play winner of Bosnia vs. Ukraine
Decision on the future of wild horses in a North Dakota national park expected next year
Rescuers in India hope to resume drilling to evacuate 41 trapped workers after mechanical problem