Delinquent Student Loan Meaning, Timeline, and Fixes
Updated on May 8, 2025
Quick Facts
Your federal student loan is delinquent after one missed payment, but most borrowers first notice delinquency after 90 days, when servicers report it to credit bureaus. Your loan officially enters default after 270 days (about nine months) of missed payments.
If your loans are simply delinquent but not yet in default, the move to restart sending defaulted loans to collections will not affect you.
What Does a Delinquent Student Loan Mean?
A delinquent student loan means a borrower has missed at least one student loan payment and is now behind. Delinquency officially starts the day after your loan payment was due and can negatively impact your financial health if not quickly resolved.
Delinquency vs. Default
What's the Difference Between Being Delinquent and Being in Default on a Student Loan?
The difference comes down to timing and consequences. Your loan becomes delinquent as soon as you miss a payment, but it moves into default after 270 days (about nine months) of missed payments. While delinquency primarily affects your credit, default triggers more severe financial consequences, like wage garnishment, tax refund offsets, and loss of eligibility for federal student aid.
What Happens After Delinquency
What Happens After a Student Loan Becomes Delinquent?
When your federal student loan payment is 90 days late, your servicer reports the delinquency to the three major credit bureaus, hurting your credit score. But beyond that initial damage, nothing severe, like wage garnishment, bank account seizure, or home foreclosure, occurs at this stage. You still have time and flexibility to resolve it before default.
For private student loans, it’s similar. Your lender reports late payments to credit bureaus sooner (often after 30 days), but serious consequences don’t immediately follow. You’ll usually have options like interest rate reductions, short-term forbearance, or catch-up payments to get current again. However, unlike some other types of debt, “goodwill” credit deletions typically aren’t possible here.
A common frustration borrowers experience is discovering their delinquency only after seeing a late payment on their credit report. Unfortunately, by then, your options to reverse the credit impact are limited.
How Many Days Do You Have to Resolve Student Loan Delinquency?
You have about 89 days to fix a student loan delinquency before your servicer reports it as late to the credit bureaus. That’s because federal student loan servicers typically don’t report late student loan payments until you’re at least 90 days past due.
Private student loans usually report even sooner, often after just 30 days.
But delinquency itself isn’t the worst-case scenario. Real trouble starts after 270 days, when federal loans officially become defaulted loans and trigger serious consequences, like being sent to a collection agency.
How to Tell If Your Student Loans Are Delinquent
So at this point, you may be wondering, “Are my student loans delinquent?”
Here’s how to tell:
Step 1: Contact Your Loan Servicer
Your servicer is the quickest, most reliable source for your current loan status. Log in to your servicer’s website or call their customer support line. They’ll immediately confirm if your loan payments are current, delinquent, or if you’re about to go into default.
Don’t know your servicer?
Federal Loans: Visit StudentAid.gov and log in. You’ll see exactly who services your federal student loan debt. Note: StudentAid.gov typically won’t mark you delinquent until you’re at least 90 days past due. Even if your account says “current,” you might still be slightly behind on your monthly payments. Always verify directly with your servicer.
Private Loans: Check your credit reports at AnnualCreditReport.com or recent billing statements. Private lenders usually report delinquencies after 30 days, making your credit report a reliable resource for early confirmation, which helps protect your credit rating.
Step 2: Already in Default?
If your federal loans might already be in default (typically after 270 days overdue), call the Default Resolution Group at 1-800-621-3115. Default has serious consequences, like having your wages garnished or your tax refunds withheld through the Treasury Offset Program.
Note: They can’t confirm delinquency. The Default Resolution Group can only confirm if you’re officially in a default status.
What You Can Do While Your Student Loan Is Still Delinquent
When your federal student loans are delinquent, you still have some wiggle room to improve your financial situation before default. If your monthly payment is unaffordable, consider an income-driven repayment plan, which bases your payments on your income and family size. You might also qualify for temporary relief through loan deferment, pausing payments for a few months.
Borrowers juggling multiple federal student loans could benefit from loan consolidation, simplifying repayment and possibly lowering monthly costs.
Acting now while you’re still considered delinquent rather than in default opens up the most helpful options.
FAQs
How do I get delinquent student loans off my credit report?
You can’t remove accurate delinquencies because credit bureaus are required to report truthful payment history. If the info is wrong, you can dispute it. Goodwill letters rarely work for student loans. The best fix is to bring the loan current and rebuild your credit through consistent, on-time payments.
My student loan was reported delinquent, but I'm still in school. Can I fix this?
Yes. If your federal student loan was mistakenly reported delinquent during school, contact your servicer immediately and provide proof of enrollment. Your servicer can correct the error with credit bureaus—but expect it to take several weeks for your credit report to reflect the correction.
I’m paying my student loans monthly, but they still show delinquent. What’s going on?
Your payments are likely being misapplied. Immediately contact your loan servicer (check StudentAid.gov if unsure), show proof of payments from bank statements, and request a payment review. Your servicer can fix this issue, but correcting your credit report may take a few months.
Bottom Line
Delinquency doesn’t mean you’ve failed, but it does mean your loan is off track. It starts with one missed payment and can quietly snowball into serious credit damage or even default if left unchecked. The good news? At this stage, you still have time.
You can catch up, explore income-driven repayment, or ask for deferment or consolidation. These options will vanish once you hit default. But the longer you wait, the fewer tools you’ll have to work with.
If you’re unsure where your loan stands or what your next move should be, don’t wait for collections to start.
Book a call with our student loan expert.
We’ll help you figure out where you stand, what’s still possible, and how to fix it before things get worse.
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