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Here's How Long the Latest Freeze on Student Loan Payments Will Last

The administration will extend the payment pause while its forgiveness plan is blocked in the courts.
Here's How Long the Latest Freeze on Student Loan Payments Will Last
Credit: Spike Johnson - Shutterstock

President Biden’s sweeping plan to forgive student loan debt for millions of Americans is stuck in the courts (we cover those legal troubles in more detail here). For borrowers, the most visible consequence of these legal blows thus far is that applications for Biden’s student loan forgiveness plan are not currently being accepted. Before this week, the pandemic pause on student loans was set to end on Dec. 31, which would have left millions of Americans unsure about how they would resume their payments.

This week, those millions have something to be thankful for: The Biden administration announced it will extend the payment pause on federal student loans. Here’s where student loan forgiveness stands right now and what that means for you.

Where student loan forgiveness stands right now

On Tuesday, the White House tweeted that “the Administration is extending the pause on federal student loan repayments to allow for the Supreme Court to rule in the case on the student debt relief program.”

The extension is in response to federal appeals courts blocking the forgiveness plan on the grounds that Biden’s plan was an overreach of power. The Education Department says on its federal student aid website that they will keep fighting for this plan, meaning the student loan forgiveness is likely to end up before the Supreme Court.

In the meantime, “it isn’t fair to ask tens of millions of borrowers eligible for relief to resume their student debt payments while the courts consider the lawsuit,” according to President Joe Biden in a video posted to Twitter Tuesday.

What this means for you

This payment freeze is not indefinite. The White House’s tweet states that the pause will end when the debt forgiveness plan is able to move out of the courts. However, if the program’s legal challenges are not resolved by the end of June, the payment freeze will end on June 30, 2023.

Whether in June or beforehand, payments will resume 60 days after the pause ends and the administration is allowed to implement its forgiveness plan.

It’s worth noting that this is the eighth time the Education Department has extended the pandemic pause on student loans. For now, while student loan forgiveness stays stuck in the courts, it doesn’t hurt to get your repayment plan in order.

Meredith Dietz
Meredith Dietz
Senior Finance Writer

Meredith Dietz is Lifehacker’s Senior Finance Writer. She earned her bachelor’s degree in English and Communications from Northeastern University, where she graduated as valedictorian of her college. She grew up waitressing in her family restaurant in Wilmington, DE and worked at Hasbro Games, where she wrote rules for new games. Previously, she worked in the non-profit space as a Leadership Resident with the Harpswell Foundation in Phnom Penh, Cambodia; later, she was a travel coordinator for a study abroad program that traced the rise of fascist propaganda across Western Europe.

Since then, Meredith has been driven to make personal finance accessible and address taboos of talking openly about money, including debt, investing, and saving for retirement. Outside of finance writing, Meredith is a marathon runner and stand-up comedian who has been a regular contributor to The Onion and Reductress. Meredith lives in Brooklyn, NY.

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