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Media Deep Dive: The Hidden Costs of Delinquency—Subprime Credit, Predatory Loans, and Debt Traps

Deep Dive: The Hidden Costs of Delinquency—Subprime Credit, Predatory Loans, and Debt Traps

One student loan in delinquency can make borrowers of every credit tier subprime, according to recent data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. Once a borrower becomes subprime, their interest rates for lines of credit could more than double, making it substantially more difficult—if not impossible in some cases—to buy a house or a car, open a credit card, get a personal loan, rent an apartment, acquire utilities or a phone plan, or access lines of credit to make ends meet. Borrowers could then be targeted with predatory loan products, some with interest rates as high as 662 percent, that can further trap them in lifelong debt.

Author: Jennifer Zhang, June 26, 2025.


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Introduction

Over 5.6 million people, or over one-in-eight student loan borrowers, were reported as delinquent on their loans in the first three months of 2025, according to estimates from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.1 This is due both to the end of the one-year on-ramp to repayment that protected borrowers from becoming delinquent, and a scheme by the Trump Administration to actively prevent borrowers from making affordable payments by blocking access to Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) plans.

Approximately 9.2 million borrowers are expected to be reported as delinquent by the end of June. This would account for 43 percent of all borrowers whose loans are not currently in forbearance due to litigation over the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan or pending applications for payment plan changes. The scale of these delinquencies is having ripple effects across the economy and is one of the key factors dropping the national average FICO score by two points (from 717 to 715) since last year.

Credit Score Impacts From Delinquency

One student loan in delinquency2 can tank a borrower’s credit score by 87 to 171 points, according to research by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. This decline is enough to make almost any such borrower subprime on their credit, including superprime borrowers with credit scores above 760. The higher a borrower’s credit score, the more a delinquency hurts, on average.

Fig. 1. Average credit score decreases due to delinquency by credit tier.3

More than two-in-five borrowers whose loans became delinquent during the first quarter of 2025 previously had credit scores above 620. These borrowers saw their scores dramatically plummet and became locked out of many conventional credit access opportunities. The New York Fed estimates that over 2.2 million borrowers saw their credit scores drop by more than 100 points, and more than 1 million had their scores drop by over 150 points.

Borrowers who already had scores below 620 were likely already dealing with restricted credit access and the other adverse impacts of being subprime or close to it. However, additional credit score drops for these borrowers, of 87 points on average, could virtually ensure that they have no credit access opportunities besides highly expensive and predatory loans.

The Cost of Delinquency

The total costs of having a subprime credit score can be financially devastating. In 2024, the average student loan borrower had a credit score of 684. Per the New York Fed researchers’ projections, a new student loan delinquency would tank such a borrower’s score by 165 points, to approximately 519, which is considered deep subprime. The borrower could suddenly be blocked from buying a home using a conventional mortgage, see their interest rate for an auto loan double, see the cost of taking out a personal loan more than quadruple,4 and face new hurdles in securing rental housing, utilities, home insurance, and cell phone plans.

Fig. 2. Average changes in interest rates and credit approval odds due to delinquency.

Fig. 3. Increased loan payments and interest from delinquency-related credit score decreases.12

The New York Fed additionally found that among borrowers who do not currently qualify for a $0 payment, delinquency rates are highest for those between the ages of 40 and 49 (28.4 percent), followed by borrowers between 50 and 59 (21.4 percent), and borrowers over 60 (25 percent). Across the board, more than one-in-four borrowers over the age of 40 with a payment due are delinquent on their loans. The massive reductions in credit access caused by delinquency can be particularly devastating if these borrowers are attempting to start or sustain a family, build home equity, establish greater financial security, or retire.

Borrowers who struggle to repay their student loans often already struggle to pay their bills in general. Locked out of conventional lending products, borrowers could turn to payday loans, auto title loans, contracts for deed, and other predatory options. These products can feature interest rates as high as 662 percent, balloon payments, equity stripping (where if a borrower fails to repay, their home, car, or another underlying asset can be seized), excessive hidden fees, and other gimmicks that conceal how unaffordable the loans are. Squeezed between bills that need to be paid, skyrocketing costs of living, forced collections on student loans, and loss of access to conventional loans, they could be rapidly subsumed into a cycle of predatory debt that is difficult to near impossible to escape.

It Didn’t Have to Be This Way

The Federal Reserve predicts that as many as 9.2 million borrowers will face negative credit reporting as a result of a student loan delinquency by the end of June 2025. In theory, further delinquencies and the associated damage to borrowers’ credit reports should be preventable; however, the Trump Administration is making student loan payments more expensive and even preventing borrowers from accessing affordable payments.

  • The SAVE Plan, which made payments significantly more affordable for 8 million borrowers, has been frozen since July 2024 as a result of right-wing litigation. Previously-enrolled borrowers are now in an indefinite forbearance until the litigation is settled.
  • In a zealous (and illegal) over-interpretation of the court order on SAVE, the Trump Administration took down applications for loan consolidation and all other IDR plans, including Income-Based Repayment (IBR), Pay As You Earn (PAYE), and Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR), leaving low-income borrowers who cannot afford their payments with no options.
  • The Trump Administration’s refusal to accept applications added to an existing backlog of 1 million applications for IDR plans. The backlog has since grown to over 1.5 million applications. For each of these borrowers, every month that their application is not processed is another month that they are kept on the hook for payments they can’t afford and/or denied credit toward loan cancellation to which they are legally entitled.
  • Following a lawsuit filed by the AFT on March 26, the Trump Administration resumed accepting applications for IDR plans, though it may take months, if not years, to clear the backlog, and some borrowers are being told that they may need to reapply.
  • In March 2025, the Trump Administration fired half the employees at the U.S. Department of Education, including the team responsible for vendor oversight and nearly all of Federal Student Aid’s student loan ombuds staff. Without these offices, borrowers will now have less effective assistance when contesting erroneous delinquencies. Although a federal court issued a preliminary injunction reversing this termination, this action is temporary pending the outcome of further litigation. These and future firings could lead to additional errors with studentaid.gov and other loan application and repayment portals.
  • The Trump Administration has taken illegal measures to gut the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB)—a primary regulator of the student loan servicing industry. In addition to Federal Student Aid’s contractual remedies, the CFPB can enforce consumer protection laws to hold servicers accountable, such as when they misreport borrowers as delinquent, fail to send billing statements on-time, misreport a single student loan as multiple loans, and make other mistakes that affect the credit standing of millions of borrowers.

On top of these developments, in May, the House of Representatives passed a budget reconciliation bill that will cut or eliminate Pell Grants for two-in-three recipients, force half of future college students to take out expensive private loans, force borrowers to start paying their loans back while still in school, end a critical federal loan program for students pursuing graduate school, and increase monthly payments by $5,000 a year for a typical family of four.

Conclusion

Beyond the damage to borrowers’ credit scores, delinquent student loans eventually lead to default, absent additional intervention.13 Such intervention typically includes enrolling in a more affordable IDR plan or applying for hardship-based forbearances and deferments. The Trump Administration has attempted to stop processing IDR plan applications, while the House budget reconciliation proposal would eliminate hardship-based forbearances and deferments for future borrowers. In addition to limiting pathways for delinquent borrowers to avoid default, the Trump Administration announced in April that it would begin forcibly collecting on defaulted federal student loans by seizing borrowers’ tax refunds and Social Security benefits, starting May 5. After significant pressure by advocates, the Administration has backtracked on its plans to seize Social Security benefits—but is still moving forward to garnish borrowers’ paychecks later this summer.

All of this is occurring under an administration that openly prioritizes the financial interests of billionaires over working Americans. The Trump Administration is actively restarting the harshest consequences of the student loan system while simultaneously closing the few paths out of delinquency and default that preserve a borrower’s ability to pay their other bills and simply survive. Borrowers are in a uniquely impossible situation—they must repay their loans with money they do not have, but because of actions by this administration, they are unable to switch to a more affordable repayment plan. Meanwhile, credit, rental housing, insurance, and other basic necessities will become increasingly expensive to completely inaccessible the further borrowers fall behind—leaving them more desperate and vulnerable to predatory lenders and, ultimately, creating ripple effects across the economy.

Jennifer Zhang is a Research Associate at the Student Borrower Protection Center. Prior to joining SBPC, she was a Director’s Financial Analyst at the CFPB, where she worked with the Student Loan Ombudsman’s office, the Policy Planning & Strategy team of the Director’s front office, and the Quantitative Analytics team of the Enforcement Division.


Endnotes:

  1. The New York Federal Reserve Bank’s estimates are derived from the New York Fed Consumer Credit Panel, which is a representative panel of anonymized credit reports from Equifax. Accordingly, these figures differ somewhat from the delinquency reporting of the National Student Loan Data System of the U.S. Department of Education. For the purpose of assessing the credit impacts of delinquency reports, we consistently refer to the New York Fed’s figures throughout this analysis. ↩︎
  2. While student loans are considered “delinquent” as soon as they are past-due, loans are typically only reported as delinquent to credit bureaus when the borrower is 90 days or more past due. However, federal loan servicers have a documented history of misreporting borrowers as delinquent before the 90-day threshold and even when they are current on their loans, and/or making other errors that negatively affect borrowers’ credit standing. ↩︎
  3. The New York Fed only reports average credit score changes due to delinquency for each credit tier. It is likely that the actual score decreases at the bounds of each credit tier are different from the average for each tier. Lacking this precise data, we therefore note that the estimated new credit scores after delinquency are only approximations. ↩︎
  4. See Figures 2 and 3. ↩︎
  5. The interest rates for a new auto loan are provided by Experian through NerdWallet. ↩︎
  6. The interest rates for a used auto loan are provided by Experian through NerdWallet. ↩︎
  7. The interest rates for personal loans are from a market-wide analysis by Business Insider for loan options available during the week of June 10, 2025. This source has substantial volatility in the average interest rates reported from week to week; a previous analysis using data from February 2025 found an eightfold increase in personal loan interest rates between the credit scores of 684 and 519. For an archive of week-to-week interest rate averages, see Wayback Machine. ↩︎
  8. The interest rate for a conventional 30-year mortgage for a credit score of 684 is provided by Experian; no interest rate is given for scores below 620. ↩︎
  9. Business Insider reports that while individual landlords may vary in their credit screening requirements, many generally prefer a credit score of at least 670. ↩︎
  10. BankRate reports that consumers with credit scores below 580 can either apply for a student credit card (which often have high interest rates) or a secured credit card (where the initial credit limit is equal to the amount of a security deposit). Some limited card options are available to consumers with scores of 580 to 669, while substantially more options are available to consumers with scores over 670. ↩︎
  11. The credit score required for employment varies significantly by position and employer. States and municipalities which restrict the usage of credit checks for employment include as of June 2024: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Nevada, Oregon, Vermont, Washington, New York City, Chicago, and Philadelphia. ↩︎
  12. The monthly payments and total interest for new auto loans are calculated for a $48,699 vehicle (which was reported as the average new vehicle price in April 2025 by Kelley Blue Book) with a 10% down payment, 68-month term, and reported interest rates at the pre-delinquency average credit score of 684 (6.70%) and post-delinquency average credit score of 519 (13.22%).

    The monthly payments and total interest for used auto loans are calculated for a $25,547 vehicle (which was reported as the average used vehicle price in April 2025 by Kelley Blue Book) with a 10% down payment, 68-month term, and reported interest rates at the pre-delinquency average credit score of 684 (9.06%) and post-delinquency average credit score of 519 (18.99%). 

    The monthly payments and total interest are calculated for a $10,000 personal loan, a 1-year term (which is not reflective of market averages but provided as an example), and reported interest rates at the pre-delinquency average credit score of 684 (36.70%) and post-delinquency average credit score of 519 (176.10%).

    All numbers are calculated with decimals and then rounded to the nearest whole, so the average additional monthly payment and total additional interest calculations may appear to be off by $1. ↩︎
  13. Student loans default after 270 days, or 9 months, of non-payment. Borrowers who are delinquent on their loans should typically be able to apply for forbearances, deferment, and enrollment in more affordable Income-Driven Repayment plans. ↩︎

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