{
  "slug": "student-loan-default",
  "question": "What are the odds of defaulting on student loans?",
  "category": "other",
  "no_reliable_estimate": false,
  "perceived": {
    "description": "Student loan default is widely discussed in personal-finance media and political discourse, but most borrowers treat it as something that happens to other people — dropouts, for-profit college attendees, or the financially irresponsible. The three-year cohort default rate published by the Department of Education (around 10%) reinforces a sense that defaults are a minority outcome. What the short tracking window conceals is that defaults continue accumulating for years after repayment begins, and the population most at risk — borrowers who attended but did not complete a degree — are also the least likely to follow financial-planning media.\n",
    "rough_estimate": "~10% default rate (3-year cohort)",
    "kind": "intuition"
  },
  "native": {
    "display": "26% of 1995-96 borrower cohort defaulted within 20 years (Brookings longitudinal)",
    "numerator": 26,
    "denominator": 100,
    "unit": "share of federal student loan borrowers who default over 20 years",
    "population": "US federal student loan borrowers (1995-96 entry cohort, 20-year follow-up)"
  },
  "normalized": {
    "lifetime_us_adult": 0.26,
    "display": "~26% lifetime default rate among federal borrowers",
    "log_value": -0.59,
    "assumptions": "The subgroup is federal student loan borrowers — roughly 16.5% of ~260 million US adults. The 26% central estimate is conditional on being a federal borrower, not a rate for all US adults. Applied unconditionally to all adults, the rate would be roughly 4.3% (26% x 16.5%). The Brookings Institution's longitudinal analysis (Scott-Clayton, 2018) tracked the 1995-96 Beginning Postsecondary Students cohort for 20 years and found a cumulative default rate of 26%. Projections for the 2003-04 cohort suggest the 20-year rate may approach 38-40%, reflecting expanded access to federal loans and growth in for-profit enrollment. The 26% figure is used as the central estimate because it is the most recent completed longitudinal observation. A point-in-time FSA portfolio snapshot (October 2025) shows more than 5.5 million borrowers in default with over $140 billion in outstanding loans. This understates lifetime risk because it does not count borrowers who previously defaulted and exited through rehabilitation or consolidation. An additional 2.73 million borrowers are 30-269 days delinquent. The uncertainty range brackets the completed 1995-96 longitudinal observation (low) against the Brookings projection for the 2003-04 cohort (high). Policy changes since these cohorts — income-driven repayment, SAVE plan (in litigation), pandemic forbearance — may alter future cohort outcomes in either direction. The 26% figure should be treated as a historical baseline from the 1995-96 cohort, not a forecast of current-borrower outcomes post-IDR/ SAVE/Fresh Start.\n",
    "uncertainty": {
      "low": 0.18,
      "high": 0.4
    },
    "scope": "subgroup_lifetime"
  },
  "sources": [
    {
      "url": "https://www.brookings.edu/articles/the-looming-student-loan-default-crisis-is-worse-than-we-thought/",
      "title": "The Looming Student Loan Default Crisis Is Worse Than We Thought",
      "publisher": "Brookings Institution",
      "source_type": "primary_study",
      "statistic": "26% of 1995-96 entry cohort defaulted within 20 years; projected ~40% for 2003-04 cohort",
      "excerpt": "\"Defaults increase by about 40 percent for the 1995-96 cohort between years 12 and 20 (rising from 18 to 26 percent of all borrowers). Applying these trends to the 2004 entry cohort suggests that nearly 40 percent may default on their student loans.\"\n",
      "source_date": "2018-01-11",
      "source_accessed": "2026-04-24",
      "archive_url": "http://web.archive.org/web/20260524130338/https://www.brookings.edu/articles/the-looming-student-loan-default-crisis-is-worse-than-we-thought/",
      "calculation_notes": "The Brookings analysis by Judith Scott-Clayton used longitudinal data from the Beginning Postsecondary Students (BPS) study to track cumulative default rates far beyond the Department of Education's standard 3-year cohort window. The 26% figure for the 1995-96 cohort at 20 years and the ~40% projection for the 2003-04 cohort establish the upper bound of the uncertainty range, showing that short-window default rates dramatically understate lifetime risk.\n",
      "independence_note": "The Brookings analysis uses BPS longitudinal survey data from NCES, which is methodologically independent from the FSA portfolio-level default counts.\n"
    },
    {
      "url": "https://studentaid.gov/data-center/student/default",
      "title": "Federal Student Aid Default Rates",
      "publisher": "U.S. Department of Education, Federal Student Aid",
      "source_type": "govt_report",
      "statistic": "More than 5.5 million borrowers with over $140 billion in federal student loans were in default as of October 2025",
      "excerpt": "\"More than 5.5 million borrowers with over $140 billion in outstanding federal student loans were in default. 1.17 million borrowers were 30-89 days delinquent, 1.56 million were 90-269 days delinquent, and 3.68 million were 270+ days delinquent.\"\n",
      "source_date": "2025-10-31",
      "source_accessed": "2026-04-26",
      "archive_url": "http://web.archive.org/web/20260525100521/https://studentaid.gov/data-center/student/default",
      "calculation_notes": "FSA Data Center figures (as reported by TICAS, October 2025): 5.5M borrowers in default with $140B in outstanding loans. An additional 2.73M borrowers are delinquent (1.17M at 30-89 days, 1.56M at 90-269 days). Combined with the 3.68M who are 270+ days delinquent (which overlaps with the default count), the total borrowers in distress exceeds 5.5M. This is a point-in-time snapshot, not a longitudinal measure — some borrowers have exited default through rehabilitation or consolidation, so the cumulative share who have ever defaulted is higher.\n",
      "independence_note": "FSA portfolio data is the official federal administrative record, independent from the Brookings longitudinal cohort analysis which uses NCES survey data.\n"
    },
    {
      "url": "https://ticas.org/affordability-2/2025-student-debt-survey-blog/",
      "title": "On the Edge of a 'Default Cliff': New Survey Shows Student Loan Borrowers Are Struggling to Keep Up",
      "publisher": "The Institute for College Access & Success (TICAS)",
      "source_type": "primary_study",
      "statistic": "20% of surveyed borrowers reported being in delinquency or default in 2024; 42% report tradeoffs between loan payments and basic needs",
      "excerpt": "\"More than four in ten borrowers (42%) report making tradeoffs between loan payments and covering their basic needs. One fifth (20%) of those surveyed said they are currently in either delinquency or default.\"\n",
      "source_date": "2025-09-01",
      "source_accessed": "2026-04-26",
      "archive_url": "http://web.archive.org/web/20260319231943/https://ticas.org/affordability-2/2025-student-debt-survey-blog/",
      "calculation_notes": "The TICAS survey captures self-reported delinquency and default, providing a cross-check on the FSA administrative data. The 20% self-reported delinquency-or-default rate is broadly consistent with FSA figures showing 5.5M in default plus 2.73M delinquent out of the total borrower population.\n"
    }
  ],
  "comparison_anchors": [
    {
      "label": "Personal bankruptcy (lifetime, US)",
      "lifetime_us_adult": 0.1
    },
    {
      "label": "Retirement savings shortfall (US)",
      "lifetime_us_adult": 0.39
    },
    {
      "label": "Identity theft (lifetime, US adult)",
      "lifetime_us_adult": 0.6
    }
  ],
  "regional_breakdown": [
    {
      "region": "For-profit college attendees",
      "probability": 0.52,
      "notes": "Brookings data shows for-profit borrowers default at roughly 3x the rate of public university borrowers"
    },
    {
      "region": "Community college (no degree)",
      "probability": 0.35,
      "notes": "Borrowers who attended but did not complete have dramatically higher default rates"
    },
    {
      "region": "Four-year public university graduates",
      "probability": 0.08,
      "notes": "Degree completers at public institutions have the lowest default rates"
    }
  ],
  "personal_factor_multipliers": [
    {
      "factor": "did not complete degree",
      "multiplier": 3,
      "notes": "Non-completers carry debt without the earnings premium; Brookings shows they drive the majority of defaults"
    },
    {
      "factor": "for-profit institution",
      "multiplier": 2.5,
      "notes": "For-profit attendees have substantially higher default rates even controlling for completion"
    },
    {
      "factor": "graduate degree holder",
      "multiplier": 0.2,
      "notes": "Graduate borrowers carry more debt but default far less frequently due to higher earnings"
    },
    {
      "factor": "parent PLUS borrower",
      "multiplier": 0.5,
      "notes": "Parent PLUS borrowers have lower default rates, though their balances are often large"
    }
  ],
  "short_label": "Student loan default",
  "myth_framing": "underrated",
  "outcome_severity": "serious_harm",
  "exposure_pattern": "cumulative",
  "outcome_type": "financial",
  "valence": "negative",
  "caveats": "The 26% figure is conditional on being a federal student loan borrower; applied to all US adults, the unconditional rate is roughly 4.3%. The central estimate comes from Brookings' 20-year longitudinal follow-up of the 1995-96 cohort; the 2003-04 cohort projection (~38-40%) suggests default rates may be rising. The FSA portfolio snapshot (5.5M+ in default as of October 2025) understates lifetime risk because it does not count borrowers who previously defaulted and exited through rehabilitation or consolidation. The policy landscape has shifted substantially since the cohorts Brookings tracked: income-driven repayment (IDR) plans now cover roughly half of borrowers in repayment, and the SAVE plan (now in litigation) was designed to prevent default for low-income borrowers entirely. The pandemic-era payment pause (March 2020 to September 2023) and Fresh Start program further complicate comparisons across cohorts. Default is also not a permanent state — borrowers can rehabilitate out of default — so the stock of defaulted borrowers at any point is lower than the cumulative flow.\n",
  "quality_score": {
    "d1": 3,
    "d2": 5,
    "d3": 5,
    "d4": 4,
    "d5": 5,
    "d6": 5,
    "d7": 4,
    "d8": 5,
    "avg": 4.5,
    "scored_by": "extracted-from-transcript",
    "scored_at": "2026-05-03",
    "methodology_version": "1.0"
  },
  "reviewer": "8d-eval-2026-05-16",
  "last_reviewed": "2026-05-16",
  "reviewed": true,
  "generated_at": "2026-04-24",
  "image": {
    "alt": "A torn diploma beside a stack of overdue bills, muted grey and rust tones, flat vector illustration."
  },
  "attribution": "Likelier — https://likelier.app",
  "license": "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/",
  "support": "https://buymeacoffee.com/kgluszczyk?via=likelier&utm_content=api-fear-single",
  "canonical_url": "https://likelier.app/student-loan-default"
}