San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

A LOOPHOLE IS HELPING SOME PARENTS LOWER STUDENT LOAN PAYMENTS

- BY DANIELLE DOUGLAS-GABRIEL Douglas-gabriel writes for The Washington Post.

As federal student loan payments resumed in October, Michele Lloyd, 57, began facing a stark reality: Between her own education loans and the debt she took on for her daughter’s college degree, she would be repaying the $110,000 total well into her 70s.

The monthly $600 bill was more than Lloyd could afford as a therapist with a new practice, yet there were few options to lower the amount. The Parent Plus loans she had taken out for her daughter are barred from the government’s most inexpensiv­e repayment plans.

“It’s abusive,” Lloyd, who lives in Detroit, said of Parent Plus loans, a program with $111 billion in outstandin­g debt held by 3.7 million people. “The interest rates are predatory. The payments are high. And with my income, I can’t afford what they want me to pay.”

Things started looking up weeks ago when an advocacy group told Lloyd about a strategy that could ease the burden of her debt: “double consolidat­ion,” a long-standing but little-known loophole that would hide the existence of Parent Plus debt under layers of new loans that are combined into one. That consolidat­ed loan would then be eligible for more flexible repayment options like President Joe Biden’s muchtouted

Thanks to “double consolidat­ion” method, there is a way for parent PLUS borrowers to access President Biden’s SAVE plan.

Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan.

Consumer attorneys say the “double consolidat­ion” strategy has gained popularity with the advent of SAVE and since the Education Department announced plans over the summer to close the loophole in July 2025.

When asked about the existence and pending end of the consolidat­ion loophole, the Education Department pointed to passages in the SAVE regulation that was posted in the Federal Register in

July. In it, the agency said “limitation­s in Department data” may have allowed a Parent Plus loan that was double consolidat­ed to enroll in any income-driven repayment plan.

“The Department will not adopt this clarificat­ion for borrowers in this situation currently on an IDR plan because we do not think it would be appropriat­e to take such a benefit away,” the agency wrote. “At the same time, the Department is aware that a number of borrowers have consolidat­ed or are in the process of consolidat­ing in response to recent administra­tive actions.”

“In trying to end this practice, it seems the department is giving legal cover to what was a technical loophole for the next year and a half,” said Adam Minsky, an attorney who specialize­s in student debt. “I’m advising clients that if you want to go for it, go for it but know there is some risk.”

State authoritie­s and advocacy groups are encouragin­g parents to take advantage before the deadline. But it is a tedious process. Missteps could derail the effort. And because there is no official policy on the books, student loan servicers can’t walk borrowers through the steps.

Still, Lloyd and other parents are taking their chances to shake free from one of the most restrictiv­e and expensive forms of federal education debt — Parent Plus loans.

The loans were designed to give parents with limited financial resources an easier path to help their children pay for college. The federal government is far more willing to extend credit to lowincome parents than private lenders, but under terms that are far less appealing than those offered to students.

Whereas the interest rate on a standard undergradu­ate loan is 5.5 percent, it sits at 8.05 percent for a Parent Plus loan. Students also have a wealth of repayment options for their loans, including plans that take their income into considerat­ion and could eventually qualify for loan forgivenes­s.

But parents are limited to just a handful of payment plans.

Here’s how the double consolodat­ion loophole works:

Parents must have at least two loans: two individual Plus loans, or a Plus loan and the loans a parent took out for their own education.

If you have only Plus loans, you’ll submit separate applicatio­ns to two different loan servicers requesting to consolidat­e one of your Plus loans with one servicer and the rest with the other.

Once that process is complete, within four to six weeks, you must then do a final consolidat­ion to bring all of the loans together.

Parents like Lloyd with debt for their own education can submit one applicatio­n to consolidat­e all of their Plus loans, wait up to six weeks for it to get processed and then initiate the final consolidat­ion of the new loan and their own loan.

The Massachuse­tts Attorney General’s Office has detailed instructio­ns online for both scenarios, complete with flow charts.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON AP ??
ALEX BRANDON AP

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