Home / Top News / What to do if Supreme Court strikes down student loan forgiveness

What to do if Supreme Court strikes down student loan forgiveness


Demonstrators in favor of canceling student debt gather outside the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 28, 2023.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Keep your payments on hold

Students prepare for loan repayment as the U.S. Supreme Court hears debt forgiveness case

If you’re unemployed or dealing with another financial hardship at that time, you can put in a request for an economic hardship or unemployment deferment. Those are the ideal ways to postpone your federal student loan payments, because interest doesn’t accrue.

If you don’t qualify for either, though, you can use a forbearance to continue suspending your bills. Just keep in mind that with forbearance, interest will rack up and your balance will be larger — possibly much larger — when you resume paying.

Compare alternate repayment plans

I have significant concerns that there will be some big servicing delays.

Betsy Mayotte

president of The Institute of Student Loan Advisors

To determine how much your monthly bill would be under different plans, use one of the calculators at Studentaid.gov or Freestudentloanadvice.org, said Betsy Mayotte, president of The Institute of Student Loan Advisors, a nonprofit.

If you do decide to change your repayment plan, Mayotte recommends submitting that application to your servicer well ahead of the timeline for payments to restart. Lenders will likely be overwhelmed when they have to begin collecting loan payments from tens of millions of people again, Mayotte said.

“I have significant concerns that there will be some big servicing delays,” she said.

Explore other forgiveness options

Jayk7 | Moment | Getty Images

What’s more, there are dozens of other forgiveness programs across the country that many borrowers are in the dark about, Kantrowitz said.

“There is no global database of all student loan forgiveness options,” he said.

For example, full-time teachers who work for five consecutive years in a low-income school may be eligible for up to $17,500 in loan forgiveness under the Teacher Loan Forgiveness Program.

The Nurse Corps Loan Repayment Program, meanwhile, allows certain nurses to get up to 85% of their student debt canceled.

File for bankruptcy

About admin

Check Also

How yelling at kids affects their happiness, success

Almost every parent yells at their child eventually, no matter how hard they try to …