Student Loans and Statutes of Limitations

By Joseph Baumhover, published Aug 24, 2006
Published Content: 20  Total Views: 10,197  Favorited By: 1 CPs
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If you're having trouble repaying your Direct or Federal Stafford Loans or Federal Perkins Loan, you have probably found yourself wondering, as many of us have, if there is any way to get out of repayment. What if you've been unable to pay much (or anything at all) on your loans for years, as interest accrues and they just get bigger and bigger?

Is there a statute of limitations on federal student loans? In other words, if a borrower who can't (or just doesn't want to) pay just waits long enough, can that borrower get out of paying the debt? Do lenders, and especially their nasty collection agencies, have to stop pursuing the poor borrower after, say, seven or ten years?

The short answer is "no." But the idea that federal student loans have a statute of limitations is a common enough misconception among students that some further explanation is due. Even some lawyers, who ought to know better, counsel their clients that they don't have to worry if they can't repay - there's always the statute of limitations.

But first: what exactly is a statute of limitations? The Random House Dictionary defines a statute of limitations as "a statute limiting the period within which legal action may be taken."

So, for example, a state or federal law may decree that there is a statute of limitations on prosecuting certain offenses, such as petty theft, while there may be no statute of limitations on more serious violations of the law. (As the police shows on TV always tell us, there's no statute of limitations on murder.) Once the statute of limitations has ended, you can no longer be prosecuted for stealing that stick of gum you took when you were ten years old.

As far as federal student loans are concerned, the statute of limitations never meant that the loans were cancelled entirely after a certain period of time. It only referred to the collection measures the lender or collection agency could take, such as suing the borrower in court, enforcing a judgment against the borrower granted by a court, offsetting a borrower's federal or state income tax refunds, or garnishing the borrower's wages.

Takeaways
  • A statue of limitations is 'a statute limiting the period within which legal action may be taken.'
  • There was once an informal statute of limitations on student loans.
  • There is currently no statute of limitations on student loans.
Did You Know?
The capture of income tax rebate checks, wage garnishments, legal proceedings and other collection tools recouped over $2.6 billion in FY 2002.
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does a collection agency collecting on a student loan have to get judgement against you in court before garnishment can be done

Posted on 07/15/2008 at 6:07:32 PM

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