Private education loan forgiveness

Informational content only. This article does not constitute legal or financial advice. Laws vary by state. Forgiven debt may be taxable income. Borrower Defense eligibility should be verified at StudentAid.gov. Last reviewed: April 2026.

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Written by Henry Silva

Private Student Loan Debt Specialist · 10+ years analyzing private education loans — including those for trade schools, vocational programs, and for-profit institutions — and identifying the non-federal relief options that apply to each. Last reviewed: April 2026.

Quick Answer

No federal forgiveness program covers private education loans. Whether the loan was for a university, trade school, vocational program, or for-profit institution — if it was funded by a private lender rather than the federal government, it is excluded from all federal forgiveness programs including PSLF, IDR forgiveness, Borrower Defense, and school closure discharge.

Important distinction: If you attended a trade school or for-profit institution and borrowed through federal loans, you may qualify for Borrower Defense or school closure discharge — those are federal programs for federal loans. If your loans were private, those federal programs do not apply. Three non-federal paths do apply to private education loans: FDCPA validation, SOL expiration, and settlement.

Private education loans cover a broader category than most borrowers realize — including loans for trade schools, vocational programs, coding bootcamps, and for-profit universities, not just traditional four-year colleges. The forgiveness question is the same regardless of the institution: if the loan was funded by a private lender, federal programs don’t apply. The non-federal options do.

Sources: CFPB — Private Student Loans · StudentAid.gov — Borrower Defense · FTC — Debt Collectors

What Is a Private Education Loan? (Legal Definition)

Under the Truth in Lending Act (TILA) and the Higher Education Opportunity Act (HEOA), a “private education loan” is defined as any extension of credit that is not a federal student loan under Title IV of the Higher Education Act, and that is extended specifically for postsecondary educational expenses. This definition is broader than “private student loan” in common usage.

Private education loans include:

✓ Traditional private student loans

Loans from banks (Sallie Mae, Discover, Citizens), credit unions, and non-bank lenders used to fund four-year university education. The most common form of private education loan.

✓ Trade and vocational school loans

Private loans used to fund cosmetology schools, HVAC programs, culinary institutes, medical assistant programs, and other vocational or trade education. Often smaller balances but with the same legal structure as traditional private loans.

✓ For-profit institution loans

Private loans used to attend for-profit universities (ITT Tech, Corinthian, DeVry, etc.) that were not originated under federal programs. Note: federal loans from these institutions may qualify for Borrower Defense — private loans do not.

✓ Institutional loans from the school itself

Some schools lend directly to students from their own funds, outside of the federal Title IV system. These institutional loans are private loans for legal purposes — they are not eligible for federal forgiveness programs, but they may be subject to state consumer protection law and the FDCPA if assigned to a third-party collector.

How to Identify Your Loan Type — Federal vs. Private

Many borrowers are uncertain whether their education loans are federal or private. The most common source of confusion: loans that were taken out to attend a private, for-profit, or vocational school are not automatically “private loans.” The loan type depends on who funded it — the federal government or a private lender — not who ran the school.

How to determine your loan type:

  1. Log in to StudentAid.gov using your FSA ID. All federal loans appear there. If a loan does not appear there, it is private.
  2. Check your credit report at AnnualCreditReport.com. Private education loans appear as tradelines from the originating bank, credit union, or servicer — not from the Department of Education.
  3. Review your original loan documents. Federal loans reference Title IV of the Higher Education Act; private loans reference a specific bank, credit union, or lender’s terms and conditions.
  4. Contact your loan servicer. Ask directly: “Is this loan a federal loan or a private loan?” The answer determines every available option.

Relief Options by Loan Type and School Type

Private education loan vs federal loan relief options 2026 — flowchart showing PSLF, IDR, school closure discharge for federal loans and FDCPA validation, SOL expiration, settlement for private loans
Figure 1: Relief options by loan type — federal vs. private education loans. School type affects federal program eligibility; FDCPA and SOL apply to private loans regardless of institution. Admin note: upload as PNG/WebP for SEO image indexing.
Private education loans by school type 2026 — relief options matrix for for-profit universities, trade schools, non-profit universities, and community colleges
Figure 2: Private education loans by school type — relief option availability. Note: Borrower Defense and school closure discharge apply only to federal loans, regardless of school type. Admin note: upload as PNG/WebP.

Federal Programs That Apply to Federal Loans (Not Private)

If you attended a for-profit university, trade school, or any institution that closed, and some of your loans were federal, the following programs may apply to those federal loans — but not to any private loans you took out simultaneously.

Federal Loans Only ✓

Borrower Defense to Repayment

Federal borrowers who attended schools that engaged in fraud or substantial misrepresentation may apply for loan cancellation through the Borrower Defense program. This applies to federal Direct Loans and some FFEL loans. Notable schools where Borrower Defense has been approved: Corinthian Colleges, ITT Tech, DeVry University. Apply at StudentAid.gov.

Private education loans: Borrower Defense does not apply. If you took out private loans to attend these schools, no equivalent federal cancellation mechanism exists for the private loan portion.

Federal Loans Only ✓

Closed School Discharge

If a school closed while you were enrolled or within 120 days of withdrawal, federal student loans may be discharged through the Closed School Discharge program. This applies to federal Direct Loans and FFEL loans. It has been used extensively for ITT Tech and Corinthian closures. Verify eligibility at StudentAid.gov.

Private education loans: No equivalent closed school discharge exists for private loans. If the school closed and you had private loans, FDCPA validation, SOL defense, and settlement remain the applicable paths.

Federal Loans Only ✓

Total and Permanent Disability (TPD) Discharge

Federal borrowers who are totally and permanently disabled may have their federal loans discharged automatically through SSA data matching, or by applying through DisabilityDischarge.com. This applies to federal loans and Perkins Loans.

Private education loans: No equivalent federal TPD discharge. Some private lenders offer their own death and disability discharge policies — see the section below on private lender policies.

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The Three Non-Federal Paths for Private Education Loans

These three paths apply to private education loans regardless of the type of school attended, the borrower’s profession, or any other circumstance. What matters is the loan’s current legal status.

Path 1 — $0 Paid

FDCPA Debt Validation

Under 15 U.S.C. § 1692g, any third-party debt buyer must stop all collection and provide written verification of the debt upon a written request. Private education loans are frequently sold to debt buyers after default — and many buyers cannot produce a complete chain of ownership documents. If they cannot validate, collection stops permanently. Available to private education loan borrowers regardless of school type.

When: Third-party debt buyer collecting · Cost: $0 · Impact: Up to 100%

Path 2 — $0 Paid

Statute of Limitations Expiration

Every state has a SOL on private education loan debt (3–10 years by state). After expiration, the debt is legally unenforceable in court. Collectors can still call — but cannot file a winning lawsuit, garnish wages, or levy bank accounts. One voluntary payment resets the clock. See the 50-state SOL guide.

When: Default 3–10+ years ago, no payments since · Warning: Any payment resets clock · Impact: 100% enforcement blocked

Path 3 — 40–70% Forgiven

Negotiated Settlement

Private education loan lenders and debt buyers accept 40–70% of the outstanding balance as full settlement — particularly when the SOL is approaching, documented FDCPA violations give counterclaim leverage, and the account has been in default 6+ months. Forgiven amounts are taxable income (IRS 1099-C); IRC § 108 insolvency exclusion may apply. See the forgiveness alternatives guide.

When: Default 6+ months · Risk: Forgiven amount taxable · Impact: 30–60% balance reduction

Death and Disability Discharge — What Private Lenders Offer

Unlike the federal TPD Discharge program, private lender death and disability policies are contractual — not statutory. They vary significantly by lender and are not guaranteed. However, some major private education loan lenders do offer discharge provisions.

Private lender policies (as of 2026 — verify directly with each lender):

LenderDeath DischargeDisability Discharge
Sallie MaeYes — with documentationYes — TPD with physician certification
DiscoverYes — with death certificateYes — permanent disability
Citizens BankYes — varies by productContact lender directly
Debt BuyersVaries — often no policyVaries — often no policy

Always request the discharge policy in writing before providing any documentation. If the loan has been sold to a debt buyer, the original lender’s policy may not apply to the current holder.

Key Definitions

What is a private education loan?

Under the Truth in Lending Act and the Higher Education Opportunity Act, a private education loan is any credit extended for postsecondary educational expenses that is not a federal student loan under Title IV. This includes loans for traditional universities, trade schools, vocational programs, for-profit institutions, and coding bootcamps — if funded by a private lender rather than the federal government.

What is Borrower Defense to Repayment?

Borrower Defense is a federal program that allows borrowers to request cancellation of federal student loans if the school that received the loan funds engaged in fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct. It applies only to federal Direct Loans. Private education loans are not covered by Borrower Defense, regardless of the school’s conduct or closure status.

What is an institutional loan?

An institutional loan is a loan made directly by the school to the student from the institution’s own funds, outside of the federal Title IV system. Institutional loans are private loans for legal purposes and are not eligible for federal forgiveness programs. They may be subject to FDCPA if assigned to a third-party collector, and state SOL statutes apply as with other private loans.

What is the FDCPA debt validation right?

Under 15 U.S.C. § 1692g, borrowers can demand written verification from any third-party debt collector, who must stop all collection until they respond. For private education loans sold to debt buyers, many collectors cannot produce a complete chain of ownership documentation. Failure to validate stops collection — a right that applies regardless of whether the loan was for a university, trade school, or vocational program.

What Most Guides Get Wrong About Private Education Loan Forgiveness

1. Most guides conflate Borrower Defense with private loan relief — they are unrelated

Borrower Defense appears in many articles about for-profit school loan relief as if it applies to all loans from those schools. It applies only to federal loans. If you took out a private loan to attend ITT Tech or Corinthian Colleges, Borrower Defense does not apply to that private loan regardless of the school’s conduct. The only mechanism that applies to private loans from predatory schools is the same three non-federal paths that apply to all private education loans.

2. Most guides don’t explain that trade school and vocational private loans are treated identically to university private loans

Many borrowers who took out private loans for cosmetology school, HVAC programs, or other vocational training assume their situation is different from someone with a university private loan. Under the FDCPA and state SOL statutes, private loans are treated identically regardless of the type of educational program they funded. The same validation rights, the same SOL timelines, and the same settlement framework apply to a $5,000 trade school private loan as to a $50,000 university private loan.

3. Most guides don’t address institutional loans separately — they are private loans with unique characteristics

Institutional loans (loaned directly by the school) are a specific category of private education loan that appears less frequently in guides. When a school that made institutional loans closes, those loans are typically not dischargeable through the federal Closed School Discharge program — because they were never federal loans. However, if the closed school assigned the institutional loan to a collection agency, the FDCPA may apply to that collector’s conduct.

4. Most guides don’t explain that private lender death and disability discharge is contractual, not statutory

Federal TPD Discharge is a statutory right — it exists regardless of what the loan documents say. Private lender death and disability discharge is a contractual provision that varies by lender and loan product. If a private loan has been sold to a debt buyer, the original lender’s death/disability policy may not transfer to the new holder. Borrowers relying on this provision should get written confirmation from the current loan holder before providing any documentation.

Decision Framework

  • First, confirm your loan is private. Log in to StudentAid.gov. If the loan is not listed there, it is private. This is the critical first step — Borrower Defense, Closed School Discharge, and IDR are unavailable for private loans regardless of what school you attended.
  • If your loan is private and a debt buyer is collecting — send an FDCPA validation request by certified mail before any payment. Do not pay the debt buyer until they confirm they can document ownership. Collection stops while they respond. See the illegal collection lawsuits guide.
  • If your private loan defaulted more than 3 years ago — check your state’s SOL using the 50-state guide. If expired, do not make any payment. If within 12–18 months of expiring, that is the optimal settlement window.
  • If you attended a for-profit or trade school and have federal loans from that school — check your Borrower Defense eligibility at StudentAid.gov. This applies to the federal loans only. Pursue private loan relief through the three non-federal paths simultaneously.
  • If you are totally and permanently disabled — contact your private lender directly about their disability discharge policy. Also apply for federal TPD Discharge for any federal loans at DisabilityDischarge.com.
  • If you have been served with a lawsuit — file a written Answer within 20–35 days (by state). Raise: expired SOL, lack of standing, FDCPA counterclaims. Missing the deadline results in an automatic default judgment. See the illegal collection lawsuits guide.

Comparison Table

OptionFederal LoansPrivate Education LoansImpact
Borrower Defense✓ Yes (for-profit fraud)✗ No100% federal balance
Closed School Discharge✓ Yes (within 120 days)✗ No100% federal balance
TPD Discharge✓ Yes (statutory)Contractual — varies100% if approved
Death Discharge✓ Yes (statutory)Contractual — varies100% if approved
FDCPA ValidationN/A✓ Yes (debt buyers)Up to 100%
SOL ExpirationNo SOL on federal✓ Yes (3–10 yrs)100% enforcement blocked
SettlementRare✓ Yes (defaulted)40–70% forgiven

Common Myths

✗ Myth

Borrower Defense can cancel private loans from for-profit schools.

✓ Reality

Borrower Defense cancels federal Direct Loans from schools that engaged in fraud or misrepresentation. It does not apply to private education loans, regardless of the school’s conduct or closure status.

✗ Myth

Private loans for trade schools are treated differently than university private loans.

✓ Reality

Private education loans are treated identically under the FDCPA and state SOL statutes regardless of the type of educational program. The same validation rights and SOL timelines apply to a cosmetology school private loan as to a university private loan.

✗ Myth

If a school closes, all loans from that school are discharged.

✓ Reality

Federal loans may qualify for Closed School Discharge if the school closed within 120 days of withdrawal. Private loans do not qualify for Closed School Discharge. The three non-federal paths (FDCPA validation, SOL, settlement) remain the applicable options for private loans from closed schools.

✗ Myth

Private lender death and disability discharge works the same as federal TPD Discharge.

✓ Reality

Federal TPD Discharge is a statutory right — it applies regardless of what the loan documents say. Private lender death/disability discharge is a contractual provision that varies by lender and product, and may not transfer if the loan has been sold to a debt buyer.

✗ Myth

Institutional loans from the school qualify for Closed School Discharge.

✓ Reality

Institutional loans — made directly by the school from its own funds — are private loans. They do not qualify for federal Closed School Discharge. If the school that made the institutional loan closed, the loan is still a private debt subject to normal collection.

Real Case Studies

Representative cases. Names and details changed. Results vary by circumstance.

Case #1 — Texas / Trade School Private Loan — FDCPA Validation ($0 Paid)

Loan$14,200 — private loan for HVAC vocational program (school still operating)
StatusDefault 2021. TX 4-year SOL (Tex. CPC § 16.004). SOL expired 2025.
SituationDebt buyer calling with garnishment threats. TX prohibits wage garnishment for private debt.
Violations2 FDCPA violations: garnishment threat (§ 1692e(4)) + call after validation request.
Outcome$0 paid. SOL expired April 2025. Debt legally unenforceable. CFPB complaint filed for violations.
NoteSchool type (vocational) was irrelevant — same FDCPA rights applied as for any private loan.

Case #2 — Florida / For-Profit University — Federal + Private Split Resolution

Federal loans$28,500 — Direct Loans from for-profit university. Borrower Defense application filed 2023. Approved 2024. Federal loans discharged.
Private loans$19,800 — Private loan from same university (Citizens Bank). Borrower Defense did NOT apply.
Private resolutionDefault 2020. FL 5-year SOL (§ 95.11(2)). SOL expired 2025. FDCPA validation sent. Buyer could not produce promissory note.
Private outcome$0 paid on private loan. Collection stopped. SOL expired making debt unenforceable.
Key lessonTwo loan types, two completely different resolution mechanisms — both resolved.

Case #3 — Illinois / Institutional Loan from Closed School — Settlement

Loan$8,400 — institutional loan from cosmetology school that closed 2021
StatusSchool assigned loan to collection agency before closing. IL 10-year SOL — not yet expired.
IssueBorrower Defense and Closed School Discharge did not apply — institutional loan, not federal.
ActionFDCPA validation sent. Collector produced partial documentation. Settlement negotiated.
Settlement$2,800 (33%) — $5,600 forgiven. IRC § 108 insolvency exclusion applied.
NoteSchool closure created no special forgiveness rights for the private institutional loan.

What Borrowers Say

Individual results vary. Names abbreviated for privacy.

“I thought Borrower Defense would cover my private loan from ITT Tech. It covers federal loans only. The private loan was handled separately through FDCPA validation — the debt buyer couldn’t produce the assignment documents. $0 paid.”

D.L. — Houston, TX

Consulted 2025 · ITT Tech vocational program

“My federal loans from the for-profit school were discharged through Borrower Defense in 2024. The private loan I took out at the same time was a completely different process. The SOL on it expired in 2025 and collection is stopped.”

S.W. — Miami, FL

Consulted 2024 · For-profit university

“My cosmetology school made me a loan directly. When they closed, I assumed it was discharged. It wasn’t — it was an institutional private loan. We settled for 33 cents on the dollar. I wish I had known the difference between federal and institutional loans earlier.”

B.C. — Chicago, IL

Consulted 2025 · Cosmetology school closure

Risks and Considerations

Any payment resets the SOL

One voluntary payment on a defaulted private education loan resets the statute of limitations from zero. Verify SOL status before any payment on any private loan defaulted more than 2 years ago — regardless of school type.

Borrower Defense has strict deadlines

For federal loans from fraud-engaged schools, Borrower Defense applications must be filed on time. Late applications may be denied. Verify current deadlines at StudentAid.gov. This has no effect on private loans.

Settlement creates taxable income

Forgiven amounts from private education loan settlement are reported on IRS Form 1099-C as ordinary income. The IRC § 108 insolvency exclusion may reduce or eliminate the tax liability. Consult a tax professional before settling.

Lawsuit deadlines are absolute

If served with a private education loan lawsuit, the Answer deadline is 20–35 days by state with no grace period. Missing it results in an automatic default judgment enabling wage garnishment in most states.

What to Do Next

1

Confirm whether each loan is federal or private

Log in to StudentAid.gov with your FSA ID. Every federal loan appears there. Any loan not listed is private. Make a separate list for federal and private — they require entirely different strategies.

2

Federal loans from for-profit or closed schools: check Borrower Defense

If you attended a school that defrauded students or closed, check your Borrower Defense eligibility at StudentAid.gov. This applies to federal loans only. File as soon as possible if you qualify — deadlines apply.

3

Private loans: check your state SOL before any other action

Find the Date of First Delinquency on your credit report. Compare to your state’s SOL at the 50-state SOL guide. Do not make any payment until you know whether the debt is time-barred.

4

Private loans with a debt buyer: send FDCPA validation

Certified mail, return receipt requested. Collection stops while they respond. Document every contact the buyer makes — each FDCPA violation is worth up to $1,000 in counterclaim leverage.

5

If served with a private education loan lawsuit: file Answer immediately

20–35 days by state from service. Raise: expired SOL, lack of standing, FDCPA violations. Missing the deadline results in an automatic default judgment. This deadline applies regardless of school type or federal loan status.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is there forgiveness for private education loans in the United States?

No federal forgiveness program covers private education loans. Borrower Defense, Closed School Discharge, IDR forgiveness, and PSLF all apply only to federal student loans. Three non-federal paths produce debt resolution for private education loans: FDCPA debt validation (collection stops if debt buyer cannot document ownership), SOL expiration (debt legally unenforceable after 3–10 years by state), and negotiated settlement (40–70% forgiven). See the complete forgiveness eligibility guide.

Does Borrower Defense apply to private education loans from for-profit schools?

No. Borrower Defense applies only to federal Direct Loans and certain FFEL loans — not to private education loans, regardless of the school’s conduct. If you took out both federal and private loans to attend a for-profit school that defrauded students, you may file Borrower Defense for the federal portion while pursuing FDCPA validation, SOL defense, or settlement for the private portion. The two processes run independently.

Are trade school and vocational school private loans treated differently?

No. Private education loans for trade schools, vocational programs, cosmetology schools, and other non-traditional institutions are treated identically to university private loans under the FDCPA and state SOL statutes. The same validation rights, the same SOL timelines, and the same settlement framework apply regardless of the type of educational program the loan funded.

What happens to a private education loan if the school closes?

Nothing changes automatically for private education loans when a school closes. Federal Closed School Discharge applies only to federal loans. Private education loans remain collectible by the original lender or any debt buyer who purchased the account. The three non-federal paths — FDCPA validation, SOL defense, and settlement — remain the applicable options. Institutional loans made directly by the closed school may be assigned to a collection agency, which triggers FDCPA rights if collection is pursued by a third-party collector.

Can private education loans be discharged in bankruptcy?

Yes — under the same Brunner test (or totality standard in some circuits) that applies to federal student loans. An adversary proceeding is required, and the standard is demanding: inability to maintain a minimal standard of living while repaying, unlikely improvement in financial circumstances, and good-faith repayment efforts. The 2022 DOJ guidance made courts more receptive in some circuits. Consult a bankruptcy attorney in your state about your specific situation. For profession-specific contexts, see the private loan forgiveness for teachers guide.

Do private lenders have to discharge loans if a borrower dies?

Private lender death discharge is a contractual provision, not a statutory right. Major lenders including Sallie Mae and Discover offer death discharge with documentation — but this varies by product and may not apply if the loan has been sold to a debt buyer. Federal student loans are automatically discharged upon the borrower’s death (or parent’s death for PLUS loans). Always verify the current holder’s policy in writing before providing any documentation.

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About the Author: Henry Silva

Private Student Loan Debt Specialist at Private Student Relief. 10+ years helping borrowers with private education loans — including trade school, vocational, and non-traditional education loans — understand what forgiveness options actually exist and what non-federal paths apply. Part of the team that helped 29,000+ borrowers since 2015. Last reviewed: April 2026.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Henry Silva is a debt specialist, not a licensed attorney. Private Student Relief is a consulting organization, not a law firm. Borrower Defense eligibility should be verified at StudentAid.gov. Settlement amounts forgiven may be taxable income. Laws vary by state and individual circumstance. Last reviewed: April 2026.

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