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KEY TAKEAWAYS
- After almost a year of forgiveness being paused under the Income-Contingent Repayment and Pay As You Earn plans, more than 11,500 borrowers will soon have their student debt discharged.
- The Department of Education will also soon forgive the loans of 10,873 borrowers under the Income-Based Repayment plan.
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After almost a year of delays, thousands of borrowers will soon receive student loan forgiveness under several income-driven repayment plans.
In January, 10,729 borrowers in the Income Contingent Repayment plan and 820 in the Pay As You Earn plan were identified as being eligible for loan forgiveness, the Department of Education said in a recent court filing.
These borrowers received an email from the Education Department last week informing them they are eligible for a loan discharge, which will be processed over the next several months, Forbes reported. Student loan borrowers will typically have their remaining debt balance forgiven after 20 or 25 years of payments under eligible income-driven repayment plans.
In addition, 10,873 borrowers in the Income-Based Repayment plan were identified as eligible for loan forgiveness in January.
Why This Matters
Paying off student debt for two or more decades can be tricky for many borrowers, who often cut back on spending to make payments. Borrowers who receive forgiveness can divert more money toward growing their savings or caring for their families.
The announcement of forgiveness for more than 11,500 borrowers under the ICR and PAYE is especially pivotal, as very few income-driven plan borrowers received forgiveness under the Trump administration last year. Early in 2025, the Department of Education paused granting forgiveness under the ICR and PAYE plans in response to a lawsuit challenging the legality of several income-driven repayment plans.
Forgiveness under all income-driven repayment plans was supposed to resume in October, and Investopedia estimates the Trump administration discharged the loans of about 3,570 borrowers through the IBR plan in 2025. However, system changes required to forgive the loans of borrowers under the ICR and PAYE plans were not made until January, the Department of Education said.
For borrowers who were supposed to receive forgiveness in 2025 or earlier but had it delayed by the pauses, they will not be taxed on their loan discharge. Other borrowers who first qualified for a loan discharge in 2026 will be taxed if they accept the forgiveness.

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