The Biden-Harris Administration yesterday announced its last wave of student loan relief, approving more $600 million in forgiveness for 4,550 borrowers via the Income-Based Repayment (IBR) Plan and granting 4,100 individual Borrower Defense approvals. This marks a total of $188.8 billion in student debt relief for 5.3 million borrowers during President Biden’s term.
Why it matters:
- Strategic implications: With expanded student loan forgiveness, consumer payment behavior could shift as certain borrowers see reduced or zeroed-out balances, influencing repayment strategies and communication priorities.
- Focus on IDR reforms: The Department of Education completed its long-awaited IDR payment count adjustment. Now, borrowers can log in to StudentAid.gov to check progress toward forgiveness, adding transparency that may reduce disputes and confusion around balances in collections.
By the numbers:
- Income-Driven Repayment: 1.45 million borrowers approved for $57.1 billion in loan relief. Today’s additional $600 million addresses IBR forgiveness for 4,550 borrowers.
- Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF): 1,069,000 borrowers have seen $78.5 billion in forgiveness.
- Total & Permanent Disability (TPD): 633,000 borrowers approved, totaling $18.7 billion in relief.
- Borrower Defense & closed schools: 2 million borrowers — just under $34.5 billion in relief — received discharges due to institutional misconduct or school closures.
Driving the news:
- The Department is extending look-back windows for certain closed schools (including the Art Institutes, Le Cordon Bleu, Virginia College, and Bay State College). This ensures more former students, who left or completed programs outside the standard 120-day window, can potentially qualify for discharges.
- These adjustments come after the Administration sought to “fix a broken student loan system,” focusing on program improvements, better tracking of repayment credits, and streamlined forgiveness for public servants, disabled borrowers, and defrauded students.
What they said:
“Four years ago, President Biden made a promise to fix a broken student loan system,” said Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona. “We rolled up our sleeves and, together, we fixed existing programs that had failed to deliver the relief they promised, took bold action on behalf of borrowers who had been cheated by their institutions, and brought financial breathing room to hardworking Americans — including public servants and borrowers with disabilities. Thanks to our relentless, unapologetic efforts, millions of Americans are approved for student loan forgiveness.”