Older Americans and Student Debt

An article I read this week by FinancialBuzz.com was discussing Older Americans, Student Debt, and the impact on their Social Security benefit amounts. According to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), 452,000 Older Americans with part of their monthly senior benefits potentially subject to a new withholding projected for later this year.

After a years-long pause, the federal government is expected to resume collections on defaulted federal student loans later this year. Here’s how the process works and what retirees should know before collections resume.

Image by Simon from Pixabay

Current Offset

A federal student loan enters default after about 270 days without payment. Once that happens, the government can recover what’s owed through the Treasury Offset Program, which allows it to take money directly from certain federal payments, including Social Security.

For retirees, that can mean up to 15% of a monthly benefit is withheld before the payment reaches the bank account. On the average retirement benefit of $2,071, that would reduce a check by about $311 per month.

There is, however, a limit on how far that reduction can go:

  • Monthly benefits cannot be reduced below $750
  • Anyone receiving $750 or less is not subject to an offset

That protection has been in place since 1996 and has not been adjusted for inflation, leaving it well below the federal poverty line for a single person.

Federal Student Loan Borrowers

The fastest-growing segment of federal student loan borrowers is people over 60, a group that has nearly doubled since 2017. In many cases, these are not parents carrying debt for a child, but retirees still paying for their own education.

Research from the think tank New America found that about 80% of borrowers over 65 owe loans tied to their own schooling, often stretched out by years of accumulated interest. Some borrowed later in life for graduate school or career changes and retired before the balance was fully paid off.

That creates a difficult position for borrowers who now rely heavily on Social Security. The CFPB found that 37% of beneficiaries with student loans rely on those checks for at least 90% of what they live on.

Current Situation

Collections on defaulted federal student loans have been paused in different forms since the pandemic began in 2020. The government briefly restarted collections in 2025, but Social Security offsets were paused again after concerns about the impact on older borrowers.

A broader pause on involuntary collections followed in early 2026 while the Department of Education prepared a new repayment system called the Repayment Assistance Plan, which launches July 1, 2026.

The government has not announced exactly when Social Security offsets will restart, but many loan policy experts expect collections to resume sometime after the new program rolls out.

Actions to Take Now

It’s important to clarify if your loan is in default. You can check by logging into studentaid.gov with your Federal Student Aid ID or by calling the Treasury Offset Program hotline at 1-800-304-3107.

If your loans are not in default, Social Security offsets do not apply, even if you still have a federal student loan balance.

For borrowers already in default, there are two main ways to get out:

  • Loan rehabilitation: Make nine income-based payments over 10 months, sometimes as low as $5, to remove the default from your record.
  • Loan consolidation: Roll defaulted loans into a new Direct Consolidation Loan, usually within six to eight weeks, which ends the default status faster.

If you are unsure which path fits your situation, the Department of Education’s Default Resolution Group at 1-800-621-3115 can walk through your options.

Relief Options

Getting out of default is usually the strongest long-term fix, but it is not the only option. Some borrowers may be able to stop or reduce collections before an offset ever begins.

One possibility is a financial hardship exemption. If losing part of your Social Security check would make it difficult to cover basic expenses, you may qualify to have the offset reduced or paused.

The CFPB estimates that 82% of Social Security recipients with defaulted loans would qualify for a full suspension based on their income and expenses, but relatively few people have applied.

Note that the process depends on detailed paperwork, so gathering proof of income, bills, and medical costs ahead of time can improve the odds of approval.

Borrowers who are permanently disabled may also qualify for a Total and Permanent Disability discharge, which can cancel the loan and stop collections completely. In some cases, the process starts automatically, but many retirees still need to apply on their own.

Watch for Notices

Before any Social Security offset begins, the government sends advance notice, usually about 65 days before collections start and again at least 30 days before.

Those notices go only to the address on file with Social Security and your loan servicer. If either one is outdated, you could miss important deadlines or lose time to respond. Taking a few minutes to confirm your information now is one of the simpler steps you can take while collections are still paused.

Image by Markus Winkler from Pixabay

Expect the Unexpected

Numerous variables affect our lives and our ability to plan. It’s challenging to sift through the rapidly changing legislative landscape and understand if, when, and how it may impact you. Expecting the unexpected is becoming the norm for me.

My aim with this blog is to highlight areas impacting many across the country. If you have a specific area of interest,  click Book a Time with Lynn for a complimentary 30-minute Zoom with me. OR, send me a note via Email.

Learn more about my work @ The Living Planner. For pre-planners who would like information about overall planning, my book can help you prepare. The 2026 edition of Living Planner What to Prepare Now While You Are Living © can be purchased HERE.

Quote of the week:  “If I have the belief that I can do [something], I shall surely acquire the capacity to do it, even if I may not have it at the beginning.” -Mahatma Gandhi

You have the capacity to do anything – Lynn

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