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Public Service Loan Forgiveness

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The Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program is a United States government program that was created under the College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007 (CCRAA) to provide indebted professionals a way out of their federal student loan debt burden by working full-time in public service. It is available to anyone who has a federal loan and is employed by a qualifying public or non-profit entity.[1]

Qualifying employers

Government organizations or agencies (Federal, State or Local), 501(c)(3) organizations as defined by the IRS, and some other types of not-for-profit organizations providing designated public services qualify for PSLF.[2]

Moreover, then nature of the indivudial's job responsibilities is not a determining factor in whether the employment qualifies. Only the employer's status as qualifying or not determines whether the employment qualifies.

With limited exception, the individaul must be directly employed by the qualifying employer. Therefore, government contractors will not qualify on the basis of their government contracts. Instead, they must independently be a qualifying employer. Another example is the national labs. Employees at national labs such as a Department of Energy or National Nuclear Security Administration Lab, do not qualify on the basis of managing a lab for the government; rather, the managing entitiy of the lab must be a qualifying employer.

Eligible loans

Any loan made under the Direct Loan Program can qualify for PSLF. In particular, Subsidized and Unsubsidized Stafford Loans, PLUS Loans, and Federal Direct Consolidation Loans qualify for PSLF.

Loans in the FFEL program or Federal Perkins Loans will need to be consolidated into Direct Loans.[3] Private student loans are ineligible to be consolidated into a Direct Loan and thus cannot be discharged under the PSLF program.

Qualifying for forgiveness

An individual qualifies for PSLF after making 120 on-time, monthly payments under a qualifying repayment plan while working full-time for a qualifying employer.

Those interested in receiving PSLF should regularly submit the "Employment Certification Form" for PSLF. This form will be used by the Department of Education's contractor, FedLoan Servicing, to determine whether an individal's employment and payments qualify for the program.

https://studentaid.ed.gov/sa/sites/default/files/public-service-employment-certification-form.pdf

Qualifying payment plans

Multiple plans are available to those interested in the PSLF program. Those wishing to seek forgiveness under the PSLF should make payments under one of the income-driven repayment plans, including Income Contingent Repayment, Income Based Repayment, Pay As You Earn, or Revised Pay As You Earn.[4]

It is not recommended that borrowers choose the 10-Year Standard repayment plan, as the payments are built to have the loan paid off in full in 120 payments leaving nothing to be forgiven at the end.

References