Your parent PLUS loan may be discharged if you (not the child) become totally and permanently disabled, die, or (in some cases) file for bankruptcy. Your parent PLUS loan also may be discharged if the student for whom you borrowed dies.
Defaulting on a Parent PLUS Loan can lead to serious consequences, including wage garnishment, credit score damage, and the loss of federal benefits. But you can recover through loan rehabilitation or consolidation with the U.S. Department of Education.
How to Use the Double Consolidation Loophole: The key to using the double consolidation loophole is to consolidate each of your Parent PLUS Loans twice. In this scenario, a borrower can have as few as two Parent PLUS Loans.
Parent PLUS loans can be forgiven under the Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) plan and Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program. Parents can become eligible for these forgiveness programs only if they consolidate their PLUS loans into a Direct Consolidation Loan.
Refinancing. If you have good credit and enough household income to qualify, you may also be able to refinance your Parent PLUS loan to a lower interest rate through a private lender, which can potentially save you money.
Parent PLUS Loans are eligible for total and permanent disability discharge if the parent borrower, not the student for whom you borrowed, is totally and permanently disabled. For more information on TPD eligibility: https://studentaid.gov/manage-loans/forgiveness-cancellation/disability-discharge.
The $100,000 Loophole.
With a larger below-market loan, the $100,000 loophole can save you from unwanted tax results. To qualify for this loophole, all outstanding loans between you and the borrower must aggregate to $100,000 or less.
A Direct PLUS Loan made to you as a parent cannot be transferred to your child. You are responsible for repaying the loan. Can I ever postpone making loan payments? Yes, under certain circumstances you may receive a deferment or forbearance, which allows you to temporarily stop or lower your payments.
If you're a parent or graduate student seeking a Direct PLUS Loan, one of the requirements to qualify is that you must not have an adverse credit history. If your application is denied because of an adverse credit history, don't give up. You still have options.
Parent PLUS loans are costlier and offer less flexibility than federals loans made directly to students. Here are the details: The interest rate and origination fee are both higher than student loans. If you want to defer payments until after your student graduates, you must contact the servicer.
Yes, your Parent PLUS Loan can be transferred to your child. The best way is to refinance the loan with a private lender under your child's name. Not all lenders offer the option to refinance Parent PLUS Loans in another borrower's name, so check with the lender beforehand to see if this is available for you.
Parents can file an appeal after being denied a Parent PLUS Loan. Reach out to your school's financial aid office as soon as possible to get the appeal process started.
While your parent PLUS loans are in default, the government can garnish your wages and take your tax refunds and Social Security checks, among other consequences. Defaulted loans also aren't eligible for different repayment plans, or deferment or forbearance.
Data Summary. As of Q4 2023, approximately 3.8 million Americans owe $112.2 billion in outstanding Parent PLUS loans.
There are various circumstances and situations in which a Parent PLUS Loan may be discharged: School closure leading to the inability of your child to complete their program. Your child's school's failure to refund loan money following your child withdrawing from school, withstanding the law.
The borrower should complete a Federal Direct Parent PLUS Adjustment Form to reduce or cancel a Parent PLUS loan. To avoid complication with the return of funds, we recommend that you submit the form to our office for processing well before the funds disburse to the student's account.
What Are Some Reasons to Avoid PLUS Loans? First, PLUS loans have no automatic grace period. Then there's the fact they aren't eligible for most IDR plans. Then, borrowing too much is easy to do, and finally, they're nearly impossible to get out of, even in bankruptcy.
Scenario: Interest-free loans
If you don't charge interest, the IRS can say the amount of interest you should have charged was a gift based on current tax rules. In that case, the interest money goes toward your annual gift-giving limit of $18,000 per individual as of tax year 2024 (up from $17,000 in 2023).
A loan between family members, or even friends, isn't help—it's a trap for both parties. Whenever you loan money to a friend or family member, you've become their creditor. You're now a lender, and they're a borrower.
What's more, if the loan exceeds $10,000 or the recipient of the loan uses the money to produce income (such as using it to invest in stocks or bonds), you'll need to report the interest income on your taxes.
Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF)
Parent PLUS loan borrowers may be eligible for PSLF if they work full time for a government agency or qualifying nonprofit organization and make 120 (or 10 years) qualifying payments under the ICR plan.
A refund is issued to the parent-borrower 7-10 days after the loan has been disbursed to the student's account. The parent-borrow may elect to receive their refund via Digital Disbursement via Zelle or by Paper check. The default refund method will be via paper check.
The parent's only legal recourse would be to sue the child for breaking the contract between the parent and child. In short, both the law and the loan terms are clear that the repayment of a Parent PLUS loan is the parent's obligation.