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Personal Financestudent loans and debt

More than 9 million student loan borrowers could see a big drop in their credit scores this year

Alicia Adamczyk
By
Alicia Adamczyk
Alicia Adamczyk
Senior Writer
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Alicia Adamczyk
By
Alicia Adamczyk
Alicia Adamczyk
Senior Writer
Down Arrow Button Icon
March 26, 2025, 10:00 AM ET
More than 9 million borrowers could see significant drops in their credit scores this year.
More than 9 million borrowers could see significant drops in their credit scores this year.damircudic

Federal student loan borrowers have dealt with a chaotic five years of policy changes, inaccurate payment information, and unfulfilled promises of loan forgiveness. And now, as further uncertainty abounds, many are seeing their payments spike and their credit scores crater. In fact, more than 9 million borrowers “will face significant drops in credit score once delinquencies appear on credit reports in the first half of 2025,” the Federal Reserve Bank of New York reported Wednesday.

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This is a major change from the early days of the pandemic, when policies put in place by the federal government helped many borrowers stay financially afloat in an economically perilous time. For example, monthly payments and interest accumulation were paused for more than three years, allowing some borrowers to make significant inroads toward paying off their debt for the first time, while the delinquency rate on student loans fell below 1%. As a result, the median credit score for borrowers increased by 11 points from the end of 2019 to the end of 2020.

A big part of that improvement came from borrowers getting out of delinquent status. Pandemic policy marked all delinquent loans as current, which led to a 74-point surge in the median credit score for those borrowers by the end of 2020, from 501 to 575, according to the Fed. And once President Joe Biden’s so-called Fresh Start program, which marked all defaulted loans as current, went into effect in 2022, the median score for those with a default increased by 44 points.

“By the end of 2024, those borrowers with loans in delinquency or in default saw scores that were 103 and 72 points higher, respectively, than at the end of 2019,” the Fed reports.

In October 2023, federal payments resumed for the first time in 43 months. And while the pandemic pause helped many borrowers save for other goals and stay out of delinquency, it also meant many weren’t paying down their balances at all, and weren’t used to factoring the bill into their monthly budgets. In fact, the share of borrowers with flat or growing balances skyrocketed from 48% in 2019 to almost 73% in 2022. In 2024, the share remained elevated at 63%, according to the Fed.

Now there is likely to be a “significant” increase in delinquencies going forward as delinquencies and other nonpayments are reported to credit agencies again, the Fed reports. And that means credit scores will fall.

“We expect to see more than nine million student loan borrowers face substantial declines in credit standing over the first quarter of 2025,” researchers Daniel Mangrum and Crystal Wang write. The effects will vary by individual borrower, but “this would result in reduced credit limits, higher interest rates for new loans, and overall lower credit access.”

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About the Author
Alicia Adamczyk
By Alicia AdamczykSenior Writer
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Alicia Adamczyk is a former New York City-based senior writer at Fortune, covering personal finance, investing, and retirement.

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