You are responsible for repaying your student loans even if you do not graduate, have trouble finding a job after graduation, or just didn't like your school. If you do not make any payments on your student loans for 270 days and do not make special arrangements with your lender to get a deferment or forbearance, your loans will be in default. Defaulting on your student loans has serious consequences.
Note that student loans are now generally not dischargeable through bankruptcy.
Almost three-quarters of students who default on their loans have done so after withdrawing from school and failing to complete their studies.
The US Department of Education Debt Collection Service publishes a guide called Guide to Defaulted Student Loans to help students repay their defaulted student loans. It includes information about repaying a defaulted student loan, loan consolidation, the consequences of default, collection costs, resolving disputes, ineligibility for further Federal student aid, and related topics. For more information on repaying a defaulted loan, call 1-800-4-FED-AID (1-800-433-3243).
Other helpful web sites include:
If you default on your student loan:
And of course, you will still owe the full amount of your loan.
Two options available for postponing repayment of your student loans are deferments and forbearances. If you are thinking about defaulting on your student loans, ask the lender whether you are eligible for a deferment or forbearance before you default. You cannot receive a deferment or forbearance if your loan is in default. If you default on your loans, you are no longer eligible for deferments and forbearances.
For more information about deferments and forbearances, click here.
To get out of default, you need to make arrangements with your servicer or lender to repay the loan. Once you have made six regular payments, you will be eligible for additional Title IV aid. After you have made twelve regular payments and applied for and received "rehabilitation", you will no longer be considered in default. At this time record of the default will be removed from the reports to credit reporting bureaus.
For information about your options, contact the servicer of the loan and/or the original lender. The financial aid office at your school should be able to tell you the name, address and telephone number of your lender and can also provide you with help and advice about repayment problems.
If you default on your student loans, the lender or guarantor may use a collection agency to collect the loan. The collection agency's costs are added to the amount due, and the borrower is required to repay them in addition to the amount due on the loan.
Federal regulations state that a borrower who has defaulted on his or her student loans may be required to pay reasonable collection costs in addition to other charges, such as late payment fees. What constitutes reasonable is not very well defined.
Federal regulations concerning campus-based loan programs, such as the Perkins Loan, suggest that collection costs may not reasonably exceed 30% of the principal, interest and late charges collected on the loan, plus any court costs, for first collection efforts. For second collection efforts, the percentage increases to 40%. For Perkins loans made from 1981 through 1986, many promissory notes limited collection costs to 25% of the outstanding principal and interest due on the loan. Since then, however, promissory notes have had no such restriction.
For loans held by the US Department of Education (e.g., Federal Direct Stafford Loans), the department assesses collection costs at a rate of 25%.
When consolidating a defaulted loan, collection costs of up to 18.5% of the outstanding principal and interest may be included in the amount consolidated. So a collection agency might be willing to reduce its fees to 18.5% if the student consolidates his or her loans. But the collection agency is under no obligation to do so. So if the student consolidates his or her loans and the collection agency does not reduce its fees, the student must pay the amount in excess of 18.5%.
If you work out a payment schedule within 60 days of default, some collection agencies will waive or reduce the collection fee.
Overall, it appears that collection costs can legally be as high as 40%, perhaps even higher.
If you think the collection costs are excessive, you can ask the collection agency to provide a detailed itemization of the actual costs incurred in collecting the loan. Although federal regulations are murky on this point, it appears that the costs must be based on either the actual costs incurred in collecting the loan or the average costs incurred for similar actions taken to collect loans in similar stages of delinquency.
Source: www.finaid.org