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As student loan default rate spikes, some borrowers face ‘grave consequences,' New York Fed says

[C온라인카지노사이트] As student loan default rate spikes, some borrowers face ‘grave consequences,’ New York Fed says
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  • The delinquency rate for student loan balances spiked after a nearly five-year pause due to the pandemic, according to a new report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
  • Now, millions of borrowers face steep declines in their credit standing.

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Between their credit card balances, mortgages, auto loans, home equity lines of credit and , Americans owe a record $18.2 trillion, according to a  from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.

Still, for the most part, borrowers are managing that debt relatively well — with one exception.

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"Transition rates into serious delinquency have leveled off for credit card and auto loans over the past year," Daniel Mangrum, research economist at the New York Fed, said in a statement. "However, the first batch of past due student loans were reported in the first quarter of 2025, resulting in a large jump in seriously delinquent borrowers."

The delinquency rate for student loan balances spiked after a nearly five-year pause due to the pandemic, the New York Fed found. Nearly 8% of total student debt was reported as 90 days past due in the first quarter of 2025, compared to less than 1% a year earlier.

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Although the student loan delinquency rate is "likely to go up a little bit more," it is "still comparable to what it was in 2020," the New York Fed researchers said on a press call Tuesday.

However, in a , the researchers noted that "the ramifications of student loan delinquency are severe."

Currently,  hold federal student loans and roughly 5.3 million borrowers are in default, according to the U.S. Department of Education. Another 4 million borrowers are in "late-stage delinquency," or over 90 days past due on payments.

Among borrowers who are now required to make payments — not including those who are in deferment or forbearance or are currently enrolled in school — nearly one in four student loan borrowers are behind in their payments, the New York Fed found.  

"For many, this had grave consequences for their credit standing," the New York Fed researchers said.

The Education Department on defaulted student loans on May 5, which includes the of wages, tax returns and Social Security payments.

Until last week, the Education Department had not collected on defaulted student loans since March 2020. After the on federal student loan payments expired in September 2023, the Biden administration offered borrowers  in which they would be . That on-ramp officially ended on Sept. 30, 2024 and delinquencies began appearing on credit reports in the first quarter of 2025.

As collection activity restarts, credit scores tumble

"This has been like a car crash unfolding in slow motion," said Ted Rossman, senior industry analyst at Bankrate. Now that those collections are resuming, "the clock is running out."

Both  and FICO reported a drop in average scores starting in February as early- and late-stage credit delinquencies rose sharply, driven by the resumption of .

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York also cautioned in a March  that  who are late on their payments could see their credit scores sink by as much as  . 

A  by TransUnion found that consumers who faced default in recent months have seen their credit scores fall by 63 points, on average. For super prime borrowers — or those with credit scores above 780 — who were seriously delinquent, scores sank as much as 175 points. Credit scores typically range between 300 and 850.

"The impact that it showed to these people's credit scores is pretty staggering," said Matt Schulz, chief credit analyst at LendingTree. 

"That is something that is going to make things harder for people for a long time," he said. "There is very little in life that is more expensive than having crummy credit."

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