Student loan borrowers could be missing this crucial deadline

Student loan borrowers could be missing this crucial deadline · Yahoo Finance

If you’re overwhelmed by your federal student loans, the simplest way to get a reprieve is to apply for one of the government’s income-driven repayment plans. Under these plans, borrowers can see their payments drop to as little as 10% to 15% of their discretionary income. In cases where borrowers’ debt far exceeds their annual income, their required payments can drop to $0.

What few borrowers realize, however, is that they have to renew their income-driven plan each year. Since eligibility for these plans depends on a borrower’s income, family size, and state of residence, borrowers need to send loan servicers — companies contracted by the federal government to manage outstanding federal student loans — new documents to prove they still qualify each year.

There are currently 3.9 million borrowers enrolled in income-driven plans, according to data from the National Student Loan Data System. In April, the Department of Education (DOE) looked at a sample of 1.2 million borrowers enrolled in income-driven plans. The agency found that more than half  — 57% —  missed the deadline to reapply a year later. As a result, 31% of borrowers who missed their deadline had to claim financial hardship and put their loans into deferment or forbearance. It’s not clear from the report how many of the borrowers who missed payments became delinquent on their loans (missing one payment) or went into default (payments are 270 days past due).

People who fail to recertify their plan could be in for a nasty shock the next time they open their student loan bill. Their required monthly payment will revert to whatever they would have owed under the standard 10-year repayment plan. Because income-driven plans are based on repayment periods of 20 to 25 years, some borrowers could see their bills double.

The DOE is working on new strategies to keep borrowers from missing renewal deadlines. One idea is to have the IRS automatically send income information to borrowers’ loan servicers, which would eliminate a lot of annoying paperwork on the borrower’s end. At the moment, the onus is on loan servicers to send reminders to borrowers when their renewal deadline is approaching (their contracts with the DOE require them to send at least two notices within 90 days of a borrower’s renewal deadline). Media requests sent to five of the government’s largest contracted loan servicers were forwarded to a DOE spokesperson. The DOE provided Yahoo Finance with information for two of the five servicers, Navient and Great Lakes, which showed they use a mix of email, texts, letters, and phone calls to urge borrowers to meet their deadlines.