Trump administration moves to 'prevent benefits' for some under popular student loan forgiveness program
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The Trump administration says that its proposed changes to Public Service Loan Forgiveness "may delay or prevent forgiveness for a subset of borrowers."
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personal finance
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August 18, 2025
04:38 PM
CNBC
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Nathan Howard | ReutersThe Trump administration is moving to "prevent benefits" for some student loan borrowers under the Public Service Loan Forgiveness gram, according to an announcement on Monday.The U.S
Department of Education said it issued a notice of posed rulemaking on its regulations to halt loan forgiveness under PSLF for employees "of organizations that are undermining national security and American values through illegal means."PSLF, which President George W
Bush signed into law in 2007, allows many not-for-fit and government employees to have their federal student loans canceled after 10 years of payments.More from Personal Finance:Trump floats tariff 'rebate' for consumetudent loan forgiveness may soon be taxed againStudent loan borrowers — how will the end of the plan impact you? Tell usFor now, the language used by the Trump administration on how it will determine an organization is ineligible is vague, which advocates say could help it nix any nonfit it doesn't apve of
Organizations that vide support to undocumented immigrants or transgender people, for example, could be at risk, they say."Public Service Loan Forgiveness was enacted in a bipartisan way to help incentivize hardworking people to go into public service," said Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers. "The Trump administration is trying, through executive authority, to limit who can access this benefit based on a litmus test of who they and who they don't ."People can on the posed rules at Regulations.gov. on or before Sept. 17, the Education Department said.In its posed rule, the department says the changes "may delay or prevent forgiveness for a subset of borrowers."What it means for student loan borrowersExperts say borrowers' best option right now is to stay the course, assuming their current employer has previously been considered qualifying.That's because it remains un exactly which organizations will no longer be considered a qualifying employer for PSLF under the Trump's administration's regulations
And some experts say the changes to eligibility could be challenged in court.Whatever the outcome, the overhaul of the PSLF gram can't be retroactive, said Betsy Mayotte, president of The Institute of Student Loan Advisors, a nonfit that helps borrowers navigate the repayment of their debt.That means that if you are currently working for or previously worked for an organization that the Trump administration later excludes from the gram, you'll still get credit for that time — at least up until the rule changes go into effect."If an organization is deemed illegal, the borrower can switch jobs to another that isn't considered illegal," said higher education expert Mark Kantrowitz.The posed narrowing of PSLF comes at the same time that more than 72,000 borrowers are stuck in a backlog of applications waiting for relief under the gram.
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