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Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan is on hold. What borrowers need to know


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For those with student debt, the last few months may have given you whiplash.

First, President Joe Biden said in August that he’d be forgiving up to $20,000 for millions of borrowers. But before much celebrating could happen, Republicans brought a slew of challenges to the policy, leaving it in jeopardy even as the application for the relief went live. Since mid-October, 22 million Americans have applied for forgiveness.

Yet the biggest setback for the Biden administration’s sweeping plan came on Friday, when a U.S. appeals court temporarily blocked it from moving forward.

Here’s what borrowers need to know about the development, and what it could mean for your student debt.

Why is student loan forgiveness on hold?

What is the states’ argument against forgiveness?

The GOP-led states are accusing the president of overstepping his authority.

They also say that the action would cause some private lenders to lose business because it would prompt millions of borrowers who have their federal loans held with these companies to consolidate their debt into the main federal student loan program.

The U.S. Department of Education had said borrowers who hold these FFEL, or Federal Family Education Loans, can take this step to qualify for its relief.

How likely is their challenge to be successful?

President Biden announces student loan debt relief plan

The Education Department, in order to protect its broader loan forgiveness policy, has now said that FFEL borrowers need to have consolidated their loans by the end of September to have qualified. They can no longer do so to qualify.

This will make it harder for the GOP states to make their case that the president’s plan will cost the private lenders a considerable amount of business, said higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz.

“The state attorneys general lawsuit was the strongest of the lawsuits until the U.S. Department of Education pulled out the rug by eliminating their legal standing,” Kantrowitz said.

How much could this delay forgiveness?

Can I still apply for forgiveness?

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