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Bankruptcy and Financial Aid
This page answers common questions about the relationship between
bankruptcy and financial aid, such as student loans. The first answer concerns the impact of
bankruptcy on
eligibility for student loans.
The second answer discusses whether student loans can be
discharged through bankruptcy.
Thanks to Pat Somers of the Univ. of Arkansas at Little Rock and Art
Bilski of the Illinois Student Assistance Commission for their
assistance with this section.
Bankruptcy and Eligibility for Financial Aid
Will a bankruptcy affect a student's future eligibility for
student loans and other financial aid?
The answer to this question is a complex one because several issues
are involved. It depends on the nature of the student loan programs
(federal or private) and the type of bankruptcy.
Whatever the circumstances behind the bankruptcy, the student
should talk with the financial aid administrator at the school he
plans to attend, and explain the situation.
The financial aid administrator may be able to guide the student to
certain loan programs or lenders that may fit his needs.
Federal Loans
Generally speaking, a bankruptcy should have no impact on eligibility
for federal student aid.
A few years ago students who had their federal student loans discharged
through bankruptcy were required to reaffirm the debt in order
to be eligible for further federal student aid. But
the Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1994 (P.L. 103-394, enacted October 22,
1994) amended the FFELP regulations dealing with loans discharged in
bankruptcy. As a result of those changes, a borrower who had FFELP loans
previously discharged in bankruptcy is no longer required to reaffirm those
loans prior to receiving additional federal student aid.
Title IV
grant or loan aid (including the Perkins loan program) may not be
denied to a student who has filed bankruptcy solely on the basis of
the bankruptcy determination. Financial aid
administrators are precluded from citing bankruptcy as evidence of an
unwillingness to repay student loans. Schools may nevertheless
continue to consider the student's post-bankruptcy credit history in
determining willingness to repay the loan.
As long as there are no delinquencies or defaults on student loans
currently in repayment, the student should be eligible for additional federal
student loans, regardless of any past bankruptcies. However, if some
of the student's federal student loans are in default and were not
included in a bankruptcy, the student will not be able to get further
federal student aid until he resolves the problem. Students
with loans in default should contact the lender (or servicer or
current holder of the loan) to set up a satisfactory repayment plan in
order to regain eligibility for federal student aid. (If the loan was
discharged in bankruptcy after the borrower defaulted on the loan, it
is no longer considered to be in default.)
Parents who apply for a PLUS loan may be denied a PLUS loan if they
have an adverse credit history. The definition of an adverse credit
history includes having had debts discharged in bankruptcy within the
past five years. If this is
the case, the parents may still be eligible for a PLUS loan if they
secure an endorser without an adverse credit history. If the parents
are turned down for a PLUS loan because of an adverse credit history,
the student may be eligible for an increased unsubsidized Stafford loan.
Private Loans
Private loans are an entirely different matter. Because of the many
different types of bankruptcies, this is a very complex issue.
The student should contact the financial aid administrator at his
school for advice on the impact of a bankruptcy on eligibility for
private loans. The student should also talk to the lender and provide
evidence that he is a good risk, and be prepared to explain the
circumstances behind the bankruptcy. The lender may be more willing to
issue a loan if the borrower offers to secure the loan. If the student
is still having problems, he may want to consult the attorney
who handled the bankruptcy.
Most bankruptcies will have an impact on eligibility for private loan
programs, including some school loan programs. Many private loan
programs have credit criteria that preclude people with a bankruptcy
within the past 7 or 10 years from borrowing without a creditworthy
cosigner. There are, however, exceptions if the bankruptcy was
initiated for reasons beyond the borrower's control, such as
extraordinary medical costs, natural disasters, or other extenuating
circumstances.
If a parent went through bankruptcy, it should have absolutely no
impact on their children's eligibility for private loans, unless the
parent is required to cosign the loans.
If the bankruptcy filing included a payout plan, even if not 100%,
the student will be at an advantage in applying for private loans.
Bankruptcy filers with a payout plan, especially a 100% payout plan,
are a better risk than most people who have gone through bankruptcy.
On the
other hand, if the borrower went the Chapter 7 route, he may
have more difficulty in getting a private loan. Lenders tend to look
less favorably on complete liquidations.
Thus borrowers who filed for a Chapter 11 (or Chapter 13) and had a
payout plan will be more likely to get a private loan than borrowers
who filed a Chapter 7.
Lenders also look at whether the borrower is able to refile for
bankruptcy. Chapter 11 filers cannot immediately refile
again for bankruptcy. Although any lender should know this, they may
need to be reminded. Chapter 7 files are prohibited from refiling a
Chapter 7 bankruptcy for 6 years. However, Chapter 13 plans have no
such restriction, so a debtor can file a Chapter 7 bankruptcy, have
their debts discharged, and then file a Chapter 13 within a very short
time if new debt is incurred. A debtor can file an unlimited number of
Chapter 13 bankruptcies. On the other hand, Chapter 13 filers are
prohibited from filing a Chapter 7 immediately.
Nevertheless, lenders tend to be wary of Chapter 13 bankruptcies because a
high percentage of them are converted
to Chapter 7 cases or are dismissed because the debtor is unable
or unwilling to continue with the payment plan established under
the Chapter 13 repayment plan.
Discharging Student Loans Through Bankruptcy
Can educational loans, such as the Federal Stafford, Federal
PLUS, and private loans, be discharged through bankruptcy?
Section 523(a)(8) of the US Bankruptcy Code, at 11 U.S.C., excepts
from discharge debts for "an educational benefit overpayment or loan
made, insured, or guaranteed by a governmental unit, or made under any
program funded in whole or in part by a governmental unit or nonprofit
institution; or an obligation to repay funds received as an
educational benefit, scholarship, or stipend; or any other educational
loan that is a qualified education loan, as defined in section
221(d)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, incurred by a debtor
who is an individual" unless "excepting such debt from discharge under
this paragraph would impose an undue hardship on the debtor and the
debtor's dependents".
For the purpose of this paragraph, the definition of of a qualifying
education loan includes loans made solely to pay the higher education
expenses of an eligible student, where the student is either the
debtor, the spouse of the debtor, or the dependent of the
debtor. In addition, the loans must be for study at a school that is
eligible to participate in Title IV programs and where the student is
enrolled at least half time.
Loans that don't meet this definition, such as credit card
debt, are still dischargeable even if they were used to pay for higher
education expenses.
Thus FFELP and FDSLP loans, and education loans funded or guaranteed by private
nonprofit organizations, are automatically nondischargeable in a
bankruptcy proceeding. The only cases in which they can be discharged
through bankruptcy are:
Section 220 of the Bankruptcy Abuse Prevention and
Consumer Protection Act of 2005 (BAPCPA), P.L. 109-8, extended similar
protections to "qualified education loans" starting on October 17,
2005, even when they are not
funded or guaranteed by a nonprofit organization.
Qualified education loans is defined to include any debt incurred by
the taxpayer solely for the purpose of paying for qualified higher
education expenses of the taxpayer, the taxpayer's spouse, or any
dependent of the taxpayer. (Dependency is determined as of the time
the taxpayer took out the loan.)
Interestingly enough, most private student loan programs seem to have
some sort of nonprofit involvement.
BAPCPA also made it more difficult to file under Chapter 7. If the
borrower's income is above the median income in his/her state or is
sufficient to repay 25% or more of his/her debt, the borrower will be
forced to file under Chapter 13, which requires repayment over three
to five years. BAPCPA also
mandates credit counseling before a borrower can file for bankruptcy.
FinAid analyzed FICO score distributions before and after BAPCPA
showing no appreciable increase in availability of private student
loans. Some of this might be explained by the lenders believing that
their loans were excepted even prior to BAPCPA. If so, why did the
lenders push the BAPCPA changes based on arguments that it would
increase the availability of private student loans?
It is worth noting that the extension of the bankruptcy exception to
qualified education loans in 11 USC 523(a)(8)(B) cross-references IRC
section 221(d)(1) for the definition of a qualified education loan.
This section of the Internal Revenue Code requires the loan to be used
"solely to pay qualified higher education expenses". IRC section
221(d)(2) defines qualified higher education expenses as:
More details and other limitations on the exception to discharge can
be found in
Limitations on Exception to Discharge of Private Student Loans.
Most court cases cite Brunner v. New York State Higher Education
Services Corp. (October 14, 1987, #41, Docket 87-5013) for a
definition of "undue hardship". That decision adopted the following
three-part standard for undue hardship:
The first element of the standard usually involves evaluating what the
monthly payment would be under
Income Contingent Repayment,
as opposed to standard ten-year repayment. Note that if the borrower
has multiple student loans and could afford to repay some but not all
of them, the court will generally discharge only those loans that exceed
the borrower's ability to repay.
The second element of the standard requires the debtor to provide
evidence of additional exceptional circumstances that are strongly
suggestive of a continuing insurmountable inability to repay, such as
being disabled or having a disabled dependent. A serious physical or
mental illness might also qualify.
The court also cited the debtor's failure to take advantage of
forbearances and deferments. An inability to work in one's chosen
profession does not necessarily preclude being able to work in another field.
Even if a loan doesn't come under
the non-discharge provision for student loans under the Bankruptcy
Code, the debtor's petition would still be reviewed and
could be denied on various other grounds, such as abuse of the
bankruptcy laws.
34 CFR 685.212 describes the conditions for discharge of a loan
obligation under the federal direct loan program, and includes the
following statement on bankruptcy:
Page 2-32 of the Federal Student Financial Aid Handbook states:
Regardless of whether the education loan is dischargeable, the debtor
should consider objecting to the claim of the holder of the loan in a
Chapter 13 proceeding. This requires the creditor to provide an
accounting of the amount owed and any additional charges and fees that
were applied to the loan balance. Often lender records are in a state
of disarray (especially if the loan has been sold) and it will be
unclear how much is actually owed. The burden of proof is on the
lender, not the debtor (although it is helpful if the debtor has
cancelled checks and other records of payments made). The judge will
then decide the amount that is properly owed.
Types of Bankruptcies
This section provides a short glossary of the different types of
bankruptcies. As noted above, bankruptcy does not relieve you of the
obligation of repaying your student loans. It also does not affect
child support and alimony payments, and income tax obligations.
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