Student Loan Default vs Delinquency 2026: What’s the Difference and What To Do
📋 Know your status first · Delinquency and default require different responses · Acting early saves money
Student Loans · Finance · 2026
Know Your Status

Student Loan Default vs Delinquency: What’s the Difference?

These two words sound similar but trigger completely different consequences and require different responses. Knowing exactly which status you’re in right now determines what you should do first — and how much time you have.

Status 1

Delinquent

Your loan is past due but not yet in default. This begins the day after your first missed payment and continues until either you make the missed payments or the loan enters default.

⏱ Starts: Day 1 after missed payment
Status 2

In Default

Your loan has crossed the legal threshold for non-payment. The entire balance is now due immediately, and the government’s extraordinary collection powers are fully activated.

⚠️ Triggers: Day 270 for federal Direct Loans

Think of delinquency as a warning period and default as the enforcement stage. During delinquency, you still have full access to all your repayment options — income-driven repayment, deferment, forbearance, and loan modification. Once you enter default, most of those doors close until you formally resolve the default status.

How it progresses
The Delinquency to Default Timeline
Day 0 Payment due. Loan is current.
Day 1 Missed payment. Loan is now delinquent.
Day 90 Reported to all 3 credit bureaus. Score drops.
Day 270 Official default. Full balance due. Collections begin.
Day 270+ Garnishment, tax seizure, Social Security offset active.
Side by side
Delinquency vs Default: Key Differences
Factor Delinquent In Default
When it starts Day 1 after missed payment Day 270 (federal Direct Loans)
Credit bureau reporting After 90 days Immediately, stays 7 years
Wage garnishment Not available Up to 15%, no court order
Tax refund seizure Not available 100% of federal refund
Access to IDR plans Full access No access until resolved
Deferment/Forbearance Available Not available
Federal student aid Still eligible Ineligible until resolved
How to resolve Make missed payments Rehabilitation or consolidation
Collection fees None Up to 25% of balance
Taking action
What To Do Based on Your Status
If you are delinquent

Act now — you still have options

  • Call your loan servicer immediately — ask about deferment or forbearance
  • Apply for an income-driven repayment plan to lower your monthly payment
  • Request economic hardship deferment if you qualify
  • Make at least the minimum payment to stop the delinquency clock
  • Document every call with date, time, and representative name
  • Check studentaid.gov to confirm your servicer’s contact info
If you are in default

Choose your resolution path

  • Call Default Resolution Group: 1-800-621-3115
  • Choose between rehabilitation (better for credit) or consolidation (faster)
  • Request a hearing if wage garnishment has started
  • File IRS Form 8379 if joint tax refund was seized
  • Avoid paying third-party companies — all programs are free
  • Confirm your loan type at studentaid.gov before contacting anyone

Already in default and need the full resolution guide? Step-by-step: rehabilitation, consolidation, and how to stop garnishment

See All Options →
Special situations
Private Loans, FFEL, and Parent PLUS

Not all student loans follow the same timeline. Here’s how different loan types differ:

FFEL Loans (older federal loans held by private lenders) default after 330 days rather than 270. They follow the same rehabilitation and consolidation rules as Direct Loans, but you must contact the FFEL holder directly — not Federal Student Aid.

Parent PLUS Loans default on the same 270-day timeline as Direct Loans. However, parents — not students — are the borrowers and are personally responsible for default consequences. Parent PLUS loans can be consolidated but cannot be rehabilitated directly; they must first be consolidated into a Direct Loan.

Private Student Loans (Sallie Mae, Navient, Discover, college-specific loans) default much faster — typically after 90 to 180 days, depending on the lender. Private lenders have no administrative collection powers; they must sue you in court to garnish wages. However, the statute of limitations on private student loans (typically 3–6 years by state) means old private debt may eventually become uncollectable through courts.

Common questions
People Also Ask

How do I know if my student loans are in default or just delinquent?

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Log into studentaid.gov with your FSA ID and check your loan status under “My Aid.” Loans will show as “Default” or “Delinquent” in the loan detail screen. You can also call the Default Resolution Group at 1-800-621-3115 to confirm your status.

If you’ve received a notice from a collection agency (not your loan servicer), your loans have almost certainly entered default — servicers handle delinquent loans, while collection agencies handle defaulted ones.

Can I go from delinquent to default without warning?

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Your servicer is required to send multiple notices before your loan enters default — typically at 30, 60, 90, 120, and 180 days of delinquency. However, if your contact information is outdated, you may not receive these notices.

The transition from delinquency to default happens automatically at the 270-day mark, regardless of whether you received notice. This is why keeping your contact information updated with your servicer is critical.

Is it better to be delinquent or in default?

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Delinquency is significantly less severe. While both damage your credit, delinquency preserves your access to income-driven repayment plans, deferment, forbearance, and federal aid. Default removes all these options and adds wage garnishment, tax seizure, and collection fees.

If your loans are currently delinquent, every day matters. Contacting your servicer to explore deferment or income-driven repayment before reaching 270 days can prevent default entirely.

What happens to my credit score during delinquency vs default?

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Delinquency: Your servicer reports the missed payment to credit bureaus after 90 days. This causes a significant credit score drop — typically 50 to 100 points. Each month of continued delinquency adds additional negative marks.

Default: The default notation itself is an additional severe negative mark. Combined with the months of delinquency leading up to it, total credit score damage can exceed 100–130 points from the original score. The default stays for 7 years; delinquency marks stay for 7 years from each individual missed payment.

Complete series: Student Loan Default

Read all four guides in order

Still have questions?
Start from the beginning.

Our complete guide to student loan default covers everything — the timeline, all consequences, and every option for getting out.

Read the Full Guide → Free · No login · Updated May 2026

MyVirtualBlog.com · For informational purposes only. Not legal or financial advice.

Sources: Federal Student Aid (studentaid.gov) · U.S. Department of Education · CFPB · Navient · Sallie Mae  ·  Privacy Policy · Terms of Use