Your parent's PLUS loan will be discharged if your parent dies or if you (the student on whose behalf your parent obtained the loan) die.
The loans remain in the Parent's name. They aren't passed down to the child.
No, a Direct PLUS Loan made to a parent cannot be transferred to the child.
The double consolidation loophole is a way of making your Parent PLUS Loans eligible for the generous repayment terms of the SAVE program. You can do this by changing the source of your loan through multiple consolidations, changing it from an ineligible Parent PLUS Loan to an eligible Direct Consolidation Loan.
Parent PLUS loans can potentially be forgiven after 10 years under specific conditions, such as through the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program after consolidation into a direct consolidation loan. Parent borrowers must enroll in the Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) plan to qualify for PSLF.
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.
The Education Department doesn't forgive loan balances for parents when they retire. It will keep sending bills and adding interest until you pay off the debt, die or become totally and permanently disabled, or qualify for one of the department's student loan forgiveness programs.
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.
Impact on Co-signers and Guarantors
If the borrower passes away, the responsibility for repaying the loan immediately transfers to the co-signer or guarantor. This shift in obligation occurs as soon as they contact the bank or financial institution to continue the repayment process.
A common misunderstanding area of the Parent Plus loan is legal ownership. These loans are the legal responsibility of the parent who signs the promissory note. This means it is the parent's legal and financial responsibility to repay this loan.
Medical debt and hospital bills don't simply go away after death. In most states, they take priority in the probate process, meaning they usually are paid first, by selling off assets if need be.
In most cases, the responsibility of the mortgage will be passed to the beneficiary of the home if there is a will. If you applied for your mortgage with a co-borrower or co-signer, the solution is relatively simple: The other party must continue paying the loan.
Direct PLUS Loans for Parents
If there is money left over, the school will pay it to you. In some cases, with your permission, the school may give the leftover money to your child.
It may come as a relief to find out that, in general, you are not personally liable for your parents' debt. If they pass away with debt, it is repaid out of their estate. However, this means that debt repayment could diminish or eliminate assets and property you could have inherited from your parents.
The student must be a dependent of the parent borrower and must be under 24 years of age. Students 24 or older are not eligible to receive PLUS loan funds, but may borrow an unsubsidized Direct loan in the same amounts as listed above for a PLUS loan denial.
After at least 20 years of student loan payments under an income-driven repayment plan — IDR forgiveness and 20-year student loan forgiveness. After 25 years if you borrowed loans for graduate school — 25-year federal loan forgiveness.
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.
This repayment plan leads to loan forgiveness after 25 years under normal conditions, but borrowers pursuing PSLF could have remaining debt forgiven after 10 years (if you still have a balance left). Also note that monthly payments on the ICR plan are not capped, so there's no limit on how high they can go.
The federal government can potentially garnish your wages and Social Security benefits. But Parent PLUS loans do offer more flexible repayment options than most private loans, which can help borrowers better manage their debt obligation.
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.
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.
If a borrower dies, their federal student loans are discharged after the required proof of death is submitted. The borrower's family is not responsible for repaying the loans. A parent PLUS loan is discharged if the parent dies or if the student on whose behalf a parent obtained the loan dies.
What Are Tax Deductions for Parent PLUS Loans? You can subtract amounts from your taxable income, specifically up to $2,500 per year in interest paid on the loan. This lowers your federal income tax, potentially reducing your tax liability.