Student Loan Payments Are Back. Here’s What That Means for Millions of Borrowers

  

Photographer: Bing Guan/Bloomberg
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Millions of Americans with federal student loans must start making payments again. Given the huge scale of student loan debt in the US — 40 million people collectively owe more than $1.6 trillion — there are concerns that discretionary consumer spending will take a hit. The issue is sure to play a role in the 2024 political campaign season, as many young voters fault Republicans and a conservative-majority Supreme Court for stymieing attempts by President Joe Biden, a Democrat, to ease the debt burden. And the rising cost of college and graduate school means student debt is a problem that’s not going away.

Payments were halted by President Donald Trump in March 2020 as Covid lockdowns began in the US. The freeze also temporarily gave borrowers a 0% interest rate on their loans. The moratorium was extended multiple times. But then in May, Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, a Republican, agreed to a plan to raise the nation’s debt limit and avoid a government shutdown. That deal included a provision that prohibited the Education Department from authorizing another extension after the latest one expired. Interest accruals resumed on Sept. 1, and bills will start coming due in October.