Education Department Extends Deadline to Consolidate Loans for Forgiveness
The move is part of the Biden administration’s effort to aggressively cancel education debts through longstanding relief programs and by easing bureaucratic barriers. One of the trickiest challenges has been reaching borrowers with loans through the Federal Family Education Loan Program, a lingering vestige of a previous federal student loan system.
But millions of people still have loans made under the Federal Family Education Loan system. As of the end of April, there were still 3.5 million federal student loans owned by private lenders.
Borrowers with those loans are ineligible for most federal student debt forgiveness programs. However, they can consolidate the loans into a new, federally owned direct student loan. People can see what kind of loan they have, and consolidate into a new one, at StudentAid.gov.
Consolidating commercially held loans into a direct loan makes those borrowers eligible to benefit from a temporary government program that counts many past payments — or lengthy periods of forbearance — as qualifying ones for income-driven repayment programs, even for people who never enrolled in those programs.
Nearly one million borrowers have had $49 billion of debt eliminated through that temporary program, the Education Department said. In total, the Biden administration’s changes have led to $160 billion in debt elimination for nearly 4.6 million borrowers.
Also on Wednesday, the department said it would need more time than it had anticipated to finish those income-driven repayment adjustments. The process, which began last summer and was previously scheduled to be finished by July, will now take until September to complete, the department said. The adjustments are done automatically by the department — borrowers do not need to apply to have their loans included in the program.