What Is Student Loan Forgiveness?

Man looking over his student loan forgiveness options.

What Is Student Loan Forgiveness?

Student loan forgiveness releases borrowers from their obligation to repay part or all of their federal student loan debt. These borrowers have taken out loans to pay for their post-secondary education.

Forgiveness is available for some types of loans, but eligibility is limited to borrowers in certain public service, educational, or military professions, in addition to income-driven repayment (IDR) plans.

Key Takeaways

  • Student loan forgiveness eliminates part or all of a borrower's federal student loan debt.
  • Only federal direct loans qualify for loan forgiveness, which means private loans aren't covered.
  • You can earn student loan forgiveness by working in public service and making regular payments.
  • Federal loans may also be discharged under circumstances beyond the borrower’s control.
  • Students who feel that their educational institution defrauded them can apply for loan forgiveness under the category of borrower defense.

President Biden announced a new IDR plan on June 30, 2023, in response to the same-day Supreme Court decision that halted his previous student loan forgiveness plan. Called the Saving on a Valuable Education plan (SAVE), it offers enhanced financial benefits to student loan borrowers. Three important features of the plan launched during the summer of 2023, while the full regulations were scheduled to take effect on July 1, 2024.



On June 24, 2024, two federal district courts blocked key components of the SAVE plan, including reduced payments from 10% of disposable income to 5% and any loan forgiveness that has not already been granted. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona has stated the administration will defend the SAVE Plan.

How Student Loan Forgiveness Works

General Background

Loan forgiveness means a debt (or part of a debt) is eliminated or canceled—relieving the borrower of the obligation to repay it. Although any student loan can theoretically be forgiven, student loan forgiveness (also known as cancellation) generally applies to U.S. government-issued or government-backed loans.

In other words, forgiveness programs don't apply to any privately issued loans, such as those from a commercial bank or lenders like Sallie Mae, even if those loans are earmarked for students.

For borrowers with eligible loans, forgiveness may be an option. Individuals who want their loans forgiven must apply and continue making payments until they meet the requirements of the forgiveness program.

The highly publicized collapse of several for-profit colleges and the pandemic-induced 2020 economic crisis intensified longstanding concerns about the mounting burden of student debt. Broad loan forgiveness for all borrowers, not just those who work in public service, participate in a repayment plan, or have been defrauded by their college, has become a widely debated political issue.

In August 2022, the Biden administration announced student loan forgiveness for qualifying borrowers. To qualify, individuals had to have an income of less than $125,000 ($250,000 for married couples). If your income qualified and you were a Pell Grant recipient, you were eligible for debt cancellation up to $20,000. If you were not a Pell Grant recipient but your income still qualified, you were eligible for up to $10,000.



Federal courts issued orders to block the plan on Nov. 11, 2022. The United States Department of Education stopped taking new applications while working to overturn the decision, and any applications that were already submitted were put on hold. On June 30, 2023, the Supreme Court ruled that the Biden administration lacked the authority to cancel up to $20,000 in federal student debt per borrower.



The three-year forbearance on student loan payments and interest ended in 2023. Student loan interest charges resumed on Sept. 1, 2023, while payments were restarted in October.

Types of Student Loan Forgiveness

Only direct loans made by the federal government (currently known as the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program) are eligible for student loan forgiveness. Non-federal loans (those issued by private lenders and loan companies) aren’t part of this program.

If you do not have a William D. Ford direct loan and, instead, borrowed through the FFEL Program or the now-defunct Perkins Loan Program, you are allowed to consolidate those debts into a direct consolidation loan. The new consolidated loan is then eligible for Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF).

Bear in mind that your student loan servicer handles the repayment of your federal student loans, so work with the servicer to enroll in a repayment plan or change your current plan. You can usually do this online at the servicer’s website. You can also visit studentaid.gov to find assistance.

In addition, if you work for a federal agency, your employer may repay a portion of your loans (up to $10,000 of your loans per year, with a maximum of $60,000) through the federal student loan repayment program.

$1.75 Trillion

The size of U.S. student loan debt as of March 2024.

1. Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF)

The PSLF Program is designed specifically for people who work in public service jobs for either the government or a not-for-profit organization. You may also be able to get all or part of your loan forgiven due to specified volunteer work, military service, or medical practice.

When You Qualify

To have debt forgiven under the PSLF program, you must first make 120 qualifying payments (which means paying the minimum amount due on time). These payments must be made while you are working for a qualified employer—generally, a federal, state, or local government or a nonprofit organization with tax-exempt status.

In effect, you qualify after 10 years on the job and 10 years of monthly payments (120 payments overall).

Potentially eligible positions include those in nursing, government, police and fire departments, and social work. Only payments made after Oct. 1, 2007, qualify for the purposes of determining eligibility.

As of May 21, 2024, under the Biden administration, the U.S. Department of Education has approved $167 billion in student loan debt relief for over 4.75 million borrowers, a significant number of whom were victims of for-profit college fraud.

Applying for PSLF 

To apply for PSLF, both you and your employer need to complete and file the program’s Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) & Temporary Expanded PSLF (TEPSLF) Certification & Application. First, consolidate your FFEL Program loans and Perkins loans into a direct consolidation loan, if applicable. After the consolidation is complete, you must then submit a PSLF form to your loan servicer.

Federal Student Aid, an office of the Education Department, recommends resubmitting your form annually or whenever you change employers.

2. Repayment Plans With Loan Forgiveness

If you aren’t working in a public service position, you may still be able to get a portion of your student debt forgiven—but it will take longer. Federal IDR plans, designed to help graduates who would have trouble making payments within the standard 10-year time frame, also allow for some debt forgiveness after a certain period.

These plans include:

  • Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE): The latest plan offers student loan borrowers new and improved benefits, such as forgiving a student loan with an original principal amount of $12,000 or less after 10 years of payment (rather than the previous 20 to 25 years). SAVE replaced the existing REPAYE plan, and those previously enrolled in REPAYE were automatically enrolled in SAVE. The full slate of SAVE regulations was scheduled to go into effect on July 1, 2024, including dropping payments from 10% of the borrowers' disposable income to 5%. This payment adjustment was blocked by a federal district court on June 24, 2024, and will be on hold until a final judgment can be made. However, during the summer of 2023, three significant features went live:
  • The amount of a borrower’s income protected from payments will rise from 150% of the Federal poverty guidelines to 225%. Those loan holders who don’t meet this threshold will save at least $1,000 per year.
  • Interest charges not covered by a borrower’s monthly payments will be halted so that no unpaid interest can increase the amount a borrower owes.
  • Married borrowers who file taxes separately won’t have to include a spouse’s income in the calculation of their payment amounts.
  • Income-Based Repayment (IBR): Maximum monthly payments will be 10% to 15% of discretionary income. Forgiveness eligibility requires 20 or 25 years of qualifying payments.
  • Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR): Payments are recalculated each year based on gross income, family size, and outstanding federal loan balance; generally, they’re 20% of discretionary income. Forgiveness eligibility requires 25 years of qualifying payments.
  • Pay As You Earn (PAYE): Maximum monthly payments will be 10% of discretionary income. Forgiveness eligibility requires 20 years of qualifying payments.

3. Borrower Defense

If your school misled you or engaged in other misconduct in violation of certain state laws, you may be eligible for a loan discharge, officially known as “borrower defense to repayment” forgiveness.

Applicable to any William D. Ford Direct Loan Program loan, borrower defense originally involved the cancellation of all your current federal student loan debt if you could demonstrate that you had been defrauded or substantially deceived by the college you attended. Originally implemented in 1994, borrower defense applies mainly to private, for-profit schools that engage in dubious practices.

In June 2015, for example, the Department of Education promised debt relief to students of the Corinthian Colleges chain, which abruptly closed campuses and declared bankruptcy in the wake of federal and state investigations into its operations.

Changes to the Relief Formula

During the Trump administration, however, then-Education Secretary Betsy DeVos allegedly attempted to dismantle the program by delaying claims processing, denying claims without due process, increasing the burden of proof, or offering only partial forgiveness, calculating relief via a complex methodology that awarded applicants $0.

Under the Biden administration, the Education Department announced in March 2021 that it would rescind “the formula for calculating partial relief” and instead forgive the student loans in borrower defense applications entirely and promptly.

To have your loans discharged under the borrower defense program, you must file a claim by submitting an application on the Department of Education’s website, along with evidence that the school broke the law, significantly misled you, or misrepresented itself.

$28.7 Billion

The approximate amount of student loans canceled for students defrauded by their schools.

4. Specialized Loan Forgiveness Programs

If you work or volunteer for certain organizations, you may be eligible for additional programs that will forgive or reduce your student debt. Here are some examples:

  • AmeriCorps VISTA, AmeriCorps NCCC, or AmeriCorps State and National programs: Volunteers for these programs can receive up to the maximum Pell Grant award toward repaying qualified student loans (loans backed by the federal government) through the Segal AmeriCorps Education Award. For the 2023–2024 school year, this amounts to $7,395.
  • Army National Guard: The Army National Guard’s Student Loan Repayment Program can help you earn up to $50,000 toward your loans.
  • Full-time teachers in low-income schools or educational service agencies: Through the Teacher Loan Forgiveness Program, teachers may be eligible for forgiveness of up to either $5,000 or $17,500 on their Federal Direct and FFEL Program loans after five consecutive years of service. The higher amount is for certain math, science, and special education teachers. The Education Department has further details on its website.

Student Loan Forgiveness vs. Student Loan Discharge

Loan Forgiveness

Although their end results are similar, student loan forgiveness isn't quite the same as student loan discharge. Loan forgiveness usually occurs when you're no longer required to make payments because you're in a certain government or nonprofit job.

Loan Discharge

Loan discharge often occurs when the borrower declares bankruptcy, dies, or becomes permanently disabled. A discharge can also happen in cases of borrower defense where the educational institution is guilty of fraud or misleading a student in a meaningful way.

Drawbacks of Student Loan Forgiveness and Repayment Plans

Student loan forgiveness terms are subject to change with the shifting political winds. So, Mark Kantrowitz, president of Cerebly Inc., warns borrowers against betting their financial future on the hope of debt forgiveness, especially the kind that’s tied to public service.

10-Year Minimum Work Requirement

For one thing, there’s a rigid time limit. “Public service loan forgiveness occurs after 10 years of full-time service. It is an all-or-nothing benefit, so borrowers who stop working before reaching the 10-year mark will get no forgiveness,” Kantrowitz says.

Income-based repayment can also have a downside. More interest will accrue on your loan because the repayment is stretched over a longer period of time.

Larger Payments as Income Grows

“Loan payments under IBR and PAYE can be negatively amortized, digging the borrower into a deeper hole,” Kantrowitz explains. “Borrowers who expect to have a significant increase in their income a few years into repayment should perhaps prefer a repayment plan like extended repayment or graduated repayment, where the monthly payment will be at least as much as the new interest that accrues, and the loan balance will not increase.”

“Remember, payments change annually based on income. When your income rises, your payment can, too,” says Reyna Gobel, author of Graduation Debt: How to Manage Student Loans and Live Your Life.  Even if you succeed in lowering monthly payments, don’t go on a spending spree with the newly available funds, Gobel adds.

“If you’re currently racking up more debt because you expect these plans in the future: Stop! You never know what will or won’t exist for graduates if the law changes in the future. Ask yourself, ‘Could I afford to repay this on a regular Extended Repayment Plan?’ If not, you could be getting yourself into very high debt and a difficult situation.”

Student Loan Forgiveness Pros & Cons

Pros
  • Relieves burdensome debt

  • Encourages public service

  • Increases disposable income/spending

Cons
  • Takes years to qualify

  • May increase taxable income

  • Can accelerate accrual of interest (IDR plans)

How Do I Get Loans Forgiven?

Getting student loans forgiven has two basic steps. First, you consolidate all your loans into one debt (if you have any federal student loans that aren't direct loans). Then, you apply for forgiveness by filing a special form: the Federal Student Aid’s Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) & Temporary Expanded PSLF (TEPSLF) Certification & Application.

For those on IDR plans, your payments are calculated as you go, and your loan servicer will alert you when you've reached the amount needed for forgiveness.

Who Pays for Student Loan Forgiveness?

The U.S. government (and, by extension, the nation's taxpayers). Most student loan lenders are huge institutions, such as commercial banks or the government (specifically, the Department of Education). Until 2010, student loans were usually originated by a private lender but guaranteed by the government. The Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 ended the practice, replacing such guarantees with direct lending from the federal government.

Can Student Loan Interest Be Forgiven?

Yes, student loan interest can be forgiven—if the loan itself is forgiven. Generally, however, you can’t get loan interest forgiven by itself. If you want to pay less in student loan interest, consider refinancing the debt. In addition, some lenders will knock a bit off your loan’s current rate if you make automatic payments each month, in what’s known as an Automated Clearing House (ACH) discount.

The Bottom Line

All is not perfect with forgiveness plans. The kinds of jobs that may make you eligible for PSLF often pay significantly less than private-sector positions. You might be able to repay your loans more quickly by getting a job with a higher earning potential, even if it doesn’t qualify you for loan forgiveness. New IDR plans offer an opportunity for even those in the public sector to take advantage of forgiveness.

If you do have all or part of your student loans forgiven, be aware that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) may consider the forgiven debt to be income, so you may have to pay tax on that amount. Fortunately, this won’t be a problem for the next few years: Under the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, any forgiven student loan debt won’t be considered taxable income for the 2021–2025 tax years.

If you choose to participate in any loan forgiveness program, be sure to obtain written verification of the amount and terms of the loan forgiveness.

Article Sources
Investopedia requires writers to use primary sources to support their work. These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts. We also reference original research from other reputable publishers where appropriate. You can learn more about the standards we follow in producing accurate, unbiased content in our editorial policy.
  1. The White House. "Fact Sheet: President Biden Announces New Actions to Provide Debt Relief and Support for Student Loan Borrowers."

  2. Kansas Attorney General. "State of Alaska, et al., v. United States Department of Education, et Al," Page 7.

  3. Missouri State Attorney General. "State of Missouri v. Joseph Biden Jr.," Page 3

  4. U.S. Department of Education. "Statement From U.S. Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona on Missouri and Kansas District Court Rulings on Biden-Harris Administration’s Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) Plan."

  5. Federal Student Aid. "Federal Versus Private Loans."

  6. The White House. "Fact Sheet: President Biden Announces Student Loan Relief for Borrowers Who Need It Most."

  7. AP News. "Appeals Court Ruling Keeps Biden Student Debt Plan on Hold."

  8. Supreme Court of the United States. "Biden, President of the United States, et al. v. Nebraska et Al," Page 6 of the PDF.

  9. Federal Student Aid. "COVID-19 Emergency Relief and Federal Student Aid."

  10. Federal Student Aid. “Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF).”

  11. U.S. Office of Personnel Management. “Policy, Data, Oversight: Overview.”

  12. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. "Consumer Credit - G.19."

  13. U.S. Department of Education. "Biden-Harris Administration Announces Additional $7.7 Billion in Approved Student Debt Relief for 160,000 Borrowers."

  14. Kansas Attorney General. "State of Alaska, et al., v. United States Department of Education, et Al," Page 7.

  15. U.S. Department of Education. "How the New SAVE Plan Will Transform Loan Repayment and Protect Borrowers," Pages 1–2.

  16. Federal Student Aid. “Income-Driven Repayment Plans.”

  17. Federal Student Aid. “Borrower Defense Loan Discharge.”

  18. National Association of Student Personnel Administrators. "What You Need to Know About Borrower Defense to Repayment."

  19. Federal Student Aid. “Information About Debt Relief for Corinthian Colleges Students.”

  20. State of California Department of Justice: Office of the Attorney General. "People of the State of California v. United States Department of Education and Betsey Devos," Page 2.

  21. Federal Student Aid. "Rescission of Borrower Defense Partial Relief Methodology (EA ID: GENERAL-21-51)."

  22. U.S. Department of Education. "Department of Education Announces Action to Streamline Borrower Defense Relief Process."

  23. AmeriCorps. "Segal AmeriCorps Education Award."

  24. AmeriCorps. "Education Award Find Out More."

  25. Army National Guard. “Proudly Serve the Guard While Paying off Your Student Loan Debt.”

  26. Federal Student Aid. “Teacher Loan Forgiveness.”

  27. Federal Student Aid. "What’s the Difference Between Forgiveness, Cancellation, and Discharge?"

  28. Federal Student Loan Forgiveness. "Student Loan Forgiveness."

  29. U.S. Congress. "H.R.4872 - Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010," Pages 46–53.

  30. Internal Revenue Service. "What if My Debt Is Forgiven?"

  31. U.S. Congress. “H.R.1319 — American Rescue Plan Act of 2021.”

Open a New Bank Account
×
The offers that appear in this table are from partnerships from which Investopedia receives compensation. This compensation may impact how and where listings appear. Investopedia does not include all offers available in the marketplace.
Part of the Series
How to Pay Off Your Student Loans