For a large number of federal student loan borrowers, the repayment system is not working. A recent survey found that 50% of Black and 40% of Hispanic or Latino borrowers have experienced default, defined as 270 days of nonpayment, as compared with 29% of White borrowers. This is one key finding in a new report from The Pew Charitable Trusts that explores the repayment experiences of Black, Hispanic or Latino, and White borrowers who took out a federal undergraduate loan between 1998 and 2018. The research aims to better understand what drives such disparate repayment outcomes by race and ethnicity.
The report’s other findings show that:
Default can lead to severe financial penalties and collections, including negative credit reporting, seizure of tax refunds and Social Security payments, wage garnishment, and substantial fees. Borrowers with lower and varying incomes are more likely to experience default, with further financial strain resulting from the collection process.
It is important to note that a substantial body of research has identified structural, historic, and sometimes ongoing disparate practices that Black and Hispanic or Latino people have faced in the housing and labor markets as well as in education. Well-documented evidence of employment discrimination by race is one example of how such barriers can disadvantage borrowers in the labor market.
This report comes at a time when federal student loan default is at a major junction. Credit reporting on late payments recently resumed for the first time since March 2020, and nearly 10 million borrowers were found to be behind on their payments according to Government Accountability Office data from the beginning of 2024. And a Pew survey from May to July 2024 found that 91% of borrowers who reported that they had not made loan payments since the pandemic-related payment pause ended (in October 2023) said it would be difficult for them to start doing so. Moreover, around 6 million borrowers have a defaulted loan from before the payment pause. With collections set to resume sometime in 2025 and the possibility that default rates could skyrocket later that year when new defaults begin to occur, many more borrowers could suffer from the harsh consequences of collections with no viable route to successful repayment. All of this makes now a critical time for the Department of Education to reexamine the system and make major changes.
The report’s findings support a set of policy recommendations for reforming the default and collections system; these would benefit all borrowers who are unable to repay their student debt. Recommendations include:
Read the full report to learn more survey findings and how policymakers can improve the repayment process for borrowers who face the biggest challenges.
Ilan Levine works on The Pew Charitable Trusts’ student loan initiative.
This analysis is based on data from an online survey conducted by NORC using its AmeriSpeak probability panel on behalf of The Pew Charitable Trusts. This nationally representative survey, conducted from June 18 to July 28, 2021, studied borrowers’ experiences in and perceptions of the repayment system with a focus on those who had ever had a loan in default. Conducted after the federal student loan payment pause was announced in March 2020, the survey asked respondents to think specifically about their experiences with repayment and default before the start of the pause. Data collection was among a sample of 1,609 respondents. The margin of error for all respondents was +/-3.5 percentage points at the 95% confidence level. While different terms are used in literature to describe Hispanic or Latino populations (Latino, Latina, Latinx, Latine), Pew uses the term “Hispanic or Latino” to stay consistent throughout the article. The Pew survey used data supplied by the study panel to classify respondents’ race or ethnicity, which used the term “Hispanic” for this group.