What Happens When Forbearance Ends:
Every Option Explained for 2026
Your forbearance period is ending — now what? Here are all your options, ranked from best to worst, including loan modification, refinancing, and debt relief programs.
The Moment Forbearance Ends: What You Need to Know
When your forbearance period concludes, your loan doesn’t reset to zero. Every payment you paused is still owed — plus interest that accrued during the pause. Your servicer is required to contact you 30 days before the forbearance ends to discuss repayment options.
If they don’t contact you — reach out first. Do not wait. The worst outcome is your forbearance quietly expiring and your loan reverting to delinquent status without a repayment plan in place.
Some servicers — especially for private loans — expect a lump sum of all missed payments the day forbearance ends. If this was not confirmed in writing upfront, contact your servicer immediately and request a repayment plan instead. Federal loan servicers cannot legally demand a lump sum.
Your 5 Repayment Options After Forbearances End
Repayment Option Comparison
| Option | Changes Loan? | Credit Impact | Time | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Repayment Plan | No | Minimal | Days | Recovered income |
| Loan Modification | Yes — permanent | Minimal | Weeks | Permanent change |
| Refinance / HELOC | Yes — new loan | Minimal | 30–60 days | Good credit + equity |
| Extend Forbearance | No | Minimal | Days | Continuing hardship |
| Short Sale | Ends loan | Significant | Months | Can’t afford home |
Forbearance Cost Calculator
📊 Post-Forbearance Repayment Calculator
* Estimates only. Contact your servicer for exact figures.
✅ Bottom line: For most borrowers coming out of forbearance, a standard repayment plan is the simplest and cheapest path. Explore loan modification or refinancing only if your income has permanently changed or you have meaningful home equity to leverage.
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