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Updated November 28, 2022
Student Loans: A Timeline of Actions Taken in Light of the
COVID-19 Pandemic

Since the onset of the COVID-19 national emergency,
lawmakers and the U.S. Department of Education (ED)
have provided various types of relief for federal student
loan borrowers. For most borrowers, these include the
suspension of (1) interest accrual, (2) the requirement that
borrowers make monthly payments on their loans, and (3)
involuntary collections activities, as well as waivers of
requirements to qualify for various student loan forgiveness
or discharge benefits and the creation of a new broad-based
loan cancellation policy. While Congress authorized a
subset of these changes for a temporary period, ED has
extended some of them numerous times since their initial
expiration and has effectuated others.
This In Focus provides an overview of the Higher
Education Act (HEA; P.L. 89-329, as amended) Title IV
federal student loan programs affected by the COVID-19
pandemic-related relief and a timeline of actions taken by
lawmakers or ED authorizing, effectuating, or extending
such relief.
HEA    Student Loans
HEA Title IV authorizes the operation of three federal
student loan programs: the Direct Loan program, the
Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) program, and the
Federal Perkins Loan program. New loans are currently
authorized to be made only through the Direct Loan
program. Previously made FFEL and Perkins Loans remain
outstanding, and borrowers remain responsible for repaying
them. Approximately $1.6 trillion in HEA Title IV loans,
owed by about 45 million borrowers is outstanding.
* Direct Loan program loans are held by ED. As of June
30, 2022, about $1.4 trillion in these loans, borrowed by
or on behalf of 37.1 million individuals, was
outstanding.
* FFEL program loans may be held by private lenders,
guaranty agencies (GAs), or ED. As of June 30, 2022,
about $109 billion in these loans was held by private
lenders, representing debt for about 4.1 million
borrowers; $25.5 billion was held by GAs, representing
debt for about 1.1 million borrowers; and about $79.5
billion was held by ED, representing debt for between
2.5 million and 5.3 million borrowers.
* Perkins Loan program loans may be held by
institutions of higher education (IHEs) or ED. As of
September 15, 2022, IHEs held about $2.6 billion,
representing debt for about 910,000 million borrowers,
and ED held nearly $1.4 billion, representing debt owed
by about 439,000 borrowers.

Loan Relief
The following timeline provides information on selected
actions taken by lawmakers and ED to provide relief to
federal student loan borrowers during, and at least in part
due to, the COVID-19 national emergency. The timeline
focuses on relief that primarily addresses ED-held student
loans. During the COVID-19 national emergency, ED has
taken other student-loan related actions that are seemingly
unrelated to the COVID-19 pandemic. Only administrative
actions for which ED has explicitly referenced the COVID-
19 pandemic are included in the timeline below.
For an in-depth description of relief available to federal
student loan borrowers in light of the COVID-19 pandemic,
see CRS Report R46314, Federal Student Loan Debt Relief
in the Context of COVID-19.
2020
March 20, 2020: ED announced that it would set the
interest rate on all ED-held loans to 0% for at least 60 days;
give borrowers of these loans the option to suspend their
payments for at least two months; and automatically
suspend payments on such loans that were more than 31
days delinquent as of March 13, 2020 (or that became more
than 31 days delinquent thereafter).
March 27, 2020: Congress and the President enacted the
Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (the
CARES Act; P.L. 116-136). The CARES Act suspended
interest accrual, monthly loan payments, and involuntary
collections on Direct Loan program loans and ED-held
FFEL program loans through September 30, 2020. It
specified that suspended payments were to count toward the
120 monthly payments required under the Public Service
Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program, the 20- or 25-year
repayment periods under the income-driven repayment
(IDR) plans, and the nine voluntary payments required for
individuals to rehabilitate their defaulted loans. Soon
thereafter, ED specified that these policies would apply to
ED-held Perkins Loans.
August 21, 2020: ED announced, in accordance with a
Presidential Memorandum dated August 8, 2020, an
extension of the interest, payment, and collections
suspensions through December 31, 2020.
December 4, 2020: ED announced an extension of the
interest, payment, and collections suspensions through
January 31, 2021.

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