Student Loan Default Consequences: Every Penalty Explained
Wage garnishment. Tax refund seizure. Credit score collapse. Social Security offset. Here is every consequence of student loan default — with exact numbers, timelines, and what triggers each one.
Wage Garnishment
Triggered after default · No court order required
The Department of Education can issue an Administrative Wage Garnishment (AWG) notice directly to your employer — requiring them to withhold a portion of every paycheck and send it to the government. This is one of the most powerful debt collection tools in existence because it requires no lawsuit, no judge, and no court order.
Your employer is legally required to comply within 30 days of receiving the notice. Firing an employee to avoid garnishment is illegal — but some smaller employers may not know that. You have the right to request a hearing before garnishment begins, which can delay the process by 30–60 days.
Garnishment continues until the loan is paid off, you enter a rehabilitation program, or you consolidate the defaulted loan. Private student loans cannot use administrative garnishment — private lenders must obtain a court judgment first.
Federal Tax Refund Seizure
Treasury Offset Program · Automatic every year
Through the Treasury Offset Program (TOP), the IRS intercepts your federal tax refund before it ever reaches you. The entire refund is applied to your defaulted student loan balance. This happens automatically — you don’t receive any advance warning, and the process repeats every tax year until the debt is resolved.
The offset also applies to state tax refunds in states that participate in the State Reciprocal Program. Currently, most states participate. You will receive a notice from the Department of Treasury after the offset has occurred — not before.
If you file jointly with a spouse who is not responsible for the debt, your spouse can file an Injured Spouse Allocation (Form 8379) to recover their portion of the refund. This process takes 8–11 weeks.
Credit Score Damage
Reported to all 3 bureaus · Stays 7 years
Student loan default is one of the most damaging entries that can appear on a credit report. The default is reported to Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax simultaneously and remains for 7 years from the date of the first missed payment — not from the date of default.
The practical consequences: mortgage applications denied, credit card approvals rejected or limited to secured cards, auto loan rates dramatically higher, apartment rental applications flagged, and in some states, professional licenses can be suspended or denied to borrowers in default.
Loan rehabilitation — the only program that removes the default notation — requires 9 consecutive on-time monthly payments. After successful rehabilitation, the default is removed from your credit report, though the late payment history before default remains.
Social Security Benefit Offset
Applies to retirement, disability & survivor benefits
The government can withhold a portion of your Social Security retirement, disability (SSDI), and survivor benefits to repay defaulted federal student loans. This is a separate program from wage garnishment and operates through the Treasury Offset Program.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI) is exempt from offset. This is significant for lower-income borrowers who rely on SSI rather than regular Social Security. If you’re unsure which program applies to you, contact the Social Security Administration directly.
This consequence disproportionately affects older borrowers who took out Parent PLUS loans for their children’s education and are now approaching or in retirement.
Loss of Federal Student Aid Eligibility
Blocks new loans, grants & income-driven plans
While in default, you are completely ineligible for any new federal student aid — including Direct Loans, PLUS Loans, and Pell Grants. This means you cannot return to school using federal financial aid until the default is resolved.
You also lose access to income-driven repayment plans (IDR), deferment, and forbearance on the defaulted loans. These protections — which could have reduced or paused your payments — are only available to borrowers in good standing.
Additionally, Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) progress stops completely during default. Any qualifying payments made before default do not count toward the 120-payment requirement while loans are in default status.
Collection Fees & Balance Growth
Up to 25% added to your balance
When your loan enters default and is transferred to a collection agency, collection fees of up to 25% of your outstanding principal and interest can be added to your balance. These fees are legal and authorized by your original promissory note.
Interest continues to accrue during default at your original loan rate. On unsubsidized Direct Loans at 6.5%, a $30,000 balance grows by approximately $1,950 per year in interest alone — plus collection fees.
If you resolve the default through loan rehabilitation, collection fees may be reduced or waived. This is another reason why acting quickly after default is financially significant.
If you are married and file taxes jointly, your spouse’s portion of a joint tax refund can be seized for your defaulted loans. Your spouse can file IRS Form 8379 (Injured Spouse Allocation) to recover their share, but this takes 8–11 weeks to process. Consider filing separately if one spouse has defaulted federal loans.
| Consequence | Federal Loans | Private Loans |
|---|---|---|
| Wage garnishment | No court order needed | Court judgment required |
| Tax refund seizure | Automatic via Treasury Offset | Not available |
| Social Security offset | Up to 15% withheld | Not available |
| Statute of limitations | No limit — forever | 3–6 years by state |
| Credit reporting | All 3 bureaus, 7 years | All 3 bureaus, 7 years |
| Collection fees | Up to 25% of balance | Varies by lender |
| Rehabilitation option | Yes — removes default from credit | Negotiated case by case |
Ready to stop these consequences? See the three federal programs that can end garnishment, restore your eligibility, and get you back on track
See How to Get Out →Can I go to jail for not paying student loans?
No. You cannot be arrested or imprisoned for failing to pay student loans. Student loan default is a civil matter, not a criminal one. The government’s collection tools — garnishment, tax offset, Social Security offset — are financial penalties, not criminal enforcement.
The only student loan-related actions that could theoretically involve criminal charges are fraud (lying on your loan application) or ignoring a court summons if a private lender sues you.
How long before student loans go to collections?
Federal Direct Loans go to collections after 270 days (9 months) of non-payment. At that point, the loan is transferred to the Default Resolution Group at the Department of Education or a private collection agency under contract with the government.
FFEL loans (older federal loans held by private lenders) default after 330 days. Private student loans vary — most default after 90–180 days of non-payment, depending on the lender’s policies.
Will student loan default affect my spouse?
Your spouse is not responsible for your student loan debt unless they co-signed the loans. However, if you file taxes jointly, your joint tax refund can be seized — including your spouse’s portion. Your spouse can file IRS Form 8379 to recover their share.
Your default will not directly damage your spouse’s credit score. However, it may affect joint mortgage applications and other joint financial decisions.
Can student loans take my house?
For federal student loans, the government cannot directly seize your home. Their collection tools are limited to wages, tax refunds, and Social Security benefits. However, if the government obtains a court judgment (which is rare but possible), a lien could potentially be placed on property.
Private student loan lenders can sue you, obtain a judgment, and potentially place a lien on real property — but this is an extended legal process. Homestead exemptions in many states provide significant protection.
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Three federal programs can end wage garnishment, restore your financial aid eligibility, and remove the default from your credit report.
See How To Get Out → Free guide · No login · Updated May 2026