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ED is America’s education agency. We help students pay for school and give educators tools to do their jobs. We protect students' rights and make sure every American has equal access to an education.
Learn how to manage your student loans including finding a loan, making payments, deferring a loan, and applying for loan forgiveness.
general information about your current federal student loans; loan consolidation; Call: 1-800-4FED-AID (1-800-433-3243) or TTY: 1-800-730-8913 Spanish speakers are available (se habla español). Default Resolution Group. Borrowers whose loans are in default; Debt collection services ; Wage or tax refund garnishment; Call: 1-800-621-3115 ...
I'm looking for a loan... To get a Pell grant, direct loan, Parent PLUS loan or other federal aid, you must complete the... FSA ID; Then the... Free Application for Federal Student Aid ; Then, you should explore... Eligibility requirements. Estimates of aid. Funding your education
A federal court issued an injunction preventing the U.S. Department of Education from implementing parts of the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) Plan and other IDR plans, including— for example— SAVE’s monthly payment formula and loan forgiveness under SAVE, PAYE, and ICR plans.
The OIG Hotline is available for anyone who knows of or suspects fraud, waste, abuse, mismanagement, or violations of laws and regulations involving U.S. Department of Education funds or programs.
From Pell grants to federal work study programs, learn how to find money to pay for a student’s higher education.
Through Federal Student Aid (a performance-based organization), the U.S. Department of Education awards more than $120 billion a year in grants, work-study funds, and low-interest loans to approximately 13 million students.
The Biden-Harris Administration announced the approval of about $4.5 billion in additional student loan relief for over 60,000 borrowers who work in public service. Total loan forgiveness approved by Administration is now over $175B for 4.8M Americans.
The U.S. Department of Education today announced the next step in its ongoing efforts to provide student debt relief—a set of proposed rules that, if finalized, would authorize loan forgiveness for approximately 8 million borrowers experiencing hardship.