‘I can actually live my life’

‘I can actually live my life’

‘I can actually live my life’

  • The Department of Education resumed processing student-loan forgiveness for borrowers on income-based repayment.

  • Student-loan borrowers said they were unsure whether the relief would ever arrive.

  • One borrower who received forgiveness said she can now put more money toward retirement.

A vacation might finally be on the horizon for Tammy Stinson.

That’s because after nearly 25 years of payments, Stinson’s $70,000 student-loan balance has finally been wiped out.

“I feel like I might be free now,” Stinson, 52, told Business Insider. “I can actually live my life and hopefully retire before I’m 90.”

Stinson’s student-loan forgiveness is a result of meeting her qualifying payments on an income-based repayment plan. IBR plans offer borrowers monthly payments based on their income, with forgiveness after 20 or 25 years, depending on when they first took out the loan.

President Donald Trump’s Department of Education paused IBR processing over the summer, citing ongoing litigation regarding repayment plans, which delayed relief for borrowers. In late September, however, borrowers who met the payment threshold began receiving emails from the department notifying them that they qualified for relief, and servicers began zeroing out borrowers’ balances in mid-October.

Stinson, who now works in consulting in Pennsylvania, said that after graduating with her bachelor’s degree in economics in 2001 from St. Ambrose University, she struggled to find a well-paying job while raising her children. Her income fluctuated, and while she made her student-loan payments, they largely went toward the accumulating interest on her balance. She postponed buying a house with her husband until two years ago because she did not want to take on more debt.

“Having kids when I was younger, and then finishing school, and then just starting out feeling like I was so in debt, I just felt like it was hopeless at some points,” Stinson said.

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Not only is the loan forgiveness long-awaited for Stinson — it came at a critical time. A 2021 provision of the American Rescue Plan that made student-debt relief tax-free is set to expire in January 2026, and Stinson said she’s relieved that she won’t face a big tax bill. The Department of Education also said that it considers the “effective” date of the relief as the day that a borrower reaches their final payment. So even if their relief is not processed until next year, borrowers would not face taxes because of the 2025 effective dates.

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