This article is the second in a series looking at survey data to analyze which student loan borrowers are most likely to experience default.
The federal student loan payment and interest pause that has been in effect for more than three years is scheduled to end later this year. An analysis of survey data, coupled with emerging financial trends such as rising consumer debt delinquencies and persistent inflation, suggests that many borrowers could face economic headwinds in the months ahead that will make them more susceptible to repayment challenges when the pause ends.
The results of the survey done for The Pew Charitable Trusts show that those with fewer and more tenuous financial resources are more likely than other borrowers to have ever experienced default. Federal student loans go into default after 270 days of nonpayment.
Earlier research has highlighted the link between lower income and default risk, but the latest survey data indicates that borrowers facing a broad range of other financial challenges—such as more volatile incomes and lower levels of overall wealth—experience default at higher rates than other borrowers.
Recently, policymakers have taken several steps to address the needs of struggling borrowers when repayment resumes. For example, the federal government’s Fresh Start initiative gives them an opportunity to get loans out of default. In addition, proposed changes to the government’s Revised Pay as You Earn (REPAYE) income-driven repayment plan will make payments more affordable for many borrowers. And President Joe Biden’s student loan forgiveness program, if it withstands a Supreme Court challenge, would completely eliminate the loan balances of many borrowers with default experience.
But even with those policies in place, millions of borrowers will still owe billions of dollars, and many will continue to be at risk of loan repayment difficulties and future defaults. For borrowers already facing other financial challenges, affording payments for the first time in three years may be especially challenging.
The analysis explores the financial status of borrowers who were in repayment as of summer 2021 to better understand how their financial characteristics were linked to the likelihood of default. The data on key economic factors such as household income builds on earlier research that has provided data on how people from low-income families tend to experience default more frequently than other borrowers. Some details:
Beyond capturing the current financial status of those who were in repayment at the time of the survey and had ever experienced default, Pew researchers also sought to explore how the likelihood of default varied by the experience of—or ability to prepare for—financial disruptions. The findings examine the impact of:
This survey data builds on research that has identified which borrower groups are most likely to experience default. It highlights the importance of understanding the likelihood of default based on borrowers’ broader financial resources and experiences with unexpected events. It also explores the challenge of being able to handle competing financial pressures while juggling student loan obligations among borrowers who have ever experienced default.
Millions of Americans are slated to begin making student loan payments at some point this year, many for the first time since March 2020. As the Department of Education prepares for this massive transition, including allowing borrowers with defaulted loans to return to good standing through “Fresh Start,” policymakers should consider which types of borrowers have historically been more likely to experience default and may be most likely to do so once repayment resumes to lessen the chances of future repayment struggles.
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 1,600 respondents. The margin of error for all respondents was +/-3.5 percentage points at the 95% confidence level. This analysis is among a subset of the full sample to include only borrowers who classified as still being in repayment at the time of the survey. This analysis excluded 14 borrowers who did not know the repayment status of their undergraduate loan(s).
Lexi West is a principal associate with The Pew Charitable Trusts’ project on student borrower success, and Ilan Levine is an associate and Ama Takyi-Laryea is a manager with Pew’s student loan research project.