Federal Student Loan Rehabilitation: The 9-Payment Program and 6 Disqualifiers That Break It

Federal Student Loan Rehabilitation: The 9-Payment Program and 6 Disqualifiers That Break It

Federal Student Loan Rehabilitation: The 9-Payment Program and 6 Disqualifiers That Break It

9 min read · Last updated June 02, 2026

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Key takeaways:
  • Federal student loan rehabilitation requires exactly 9 voluntary, on-time monthly payments within 10 consecutive months. Payments from wage garnishment or tax refund offsets do not count toward the nine.
  • The minimum payment floor is $5/month if your income and expenses qualify. The standard calculation is 15% of discretionary income divided by 12. A Loan Rehabilitation Income and Expense form can lower this further.
  • After 5 qualifying rehabilitation payments, you can request suspension of wage garnishment. The suspension is not automatic. You must request it from your loan holder after payment 5 posts.
  • The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) adds a second-rehabilitation allowance effective July 1, 2027. Before that date, each federal loan can be rehabilitated only once.

A Chicago teacher with $28,000 in defaulted federal student loans has $420 garnished from each paycheck. She contacts the Federal Student Aid Default Resolution Group, submits her income documentation, and agrees to a $97 monthly rehabilitation payment. Five payments in, she requests garnishment suspension. Nine payments later, the default is erased from her credit report and she qualifies for income-driven repayment going forward. If she misses the 20-day payment window on month seven, she starts over at payment one.

Rehabilitation is the only path out of federal student loan default that removes the default notation from your credit report. Consolidation clears the default status but leaves the default record. That distinction determines whether your credit history looks like a resolved problem or like it never happened.

What rehabilitation is and who qualifies

Federal student loan rehabilitation is a program administered through the U.S. Department of Education. It allows borrowers in default to return their loans to good standing by making a series of agreed-upon payments.

Who qualifies:

You must have a federal Direct Loan or FFELP loan in default status. Loans that are delinquent but not yet in default are not eligible. Default means you have missed payments for at least 270 days — roughly nine months. If you are still in the delinquency window, you are not yet eligible for rehabilitation, but you may be able to prevent default by contacting your servicer now.

Private student loans are ineligible. Only federal loans participate in rehabilitation.

Each loan can be rehabilitated one time under pre-July 2027 rules. If you previously rehabilitated a loan and it returned to default, you cannot use rehabilitation again on that loan until the OBBBA change takes effect July 1, 2027. Until then, your only exit from a second default is consolidation.

There is no income floor to qualify. Even borrowers with very low income qualify by submitting expense documentation to establish a reasonable-and-affordable payment. That floor is as low as $5/month — roughly the cost of a cup of coffee — if your documentation supports it.

Loans enter default after 270 days of nonpayment on a standard repayment schedule. Once in default, the entire balance is due immediately. The loan is referred to a collections agency. The Department of Education may initiate wage garnishment, tax refund offset, and Social Security benefit offset without a court order. That last point surprises many borrowers: the government does not need to sue you first.

The 9-payment mechanics in detail

Nine voluntary, on-time payments. The rehabilitation agreement specifies a monthly payment amount and a due date. Each payment must be voluntary, meaning you make the payment, not the government. Payments collected through wage garnishment or tax offset do not count toward rehabilitation regardless of how many have been taken.

Within 10 consecutive months. You have 10 calendar months to complete 9 payments. One missed month is allowed, but only one. A second missed month disqualifies the attempt and you restart at zero.

The 20-day payment window. Each payment must post to your account within 20 days of the monthly due date in your rehabilitation agreement. A payment mailed on day 19 but received on day 22 does not count. Use electronic payment to eliminate transit risk.

The $5 minimum floor. If you complete the Loan Rehabilitation Income and Expense form and document your income and necessary expenses, the reasonable-and-affordable amount can be as low as $5/month. The standard formula is 15% of discretionary income divided by 12. Submit the income documentation when you contact your loan holder to open the rehabilitation process.

Garnishment suspension at payment 5. After 5 qualifying payments post, you can contact your loan holder and request that wage garnishment be suspended. This does not happen automatically — you must ask. The loan holder submits the suspension to your employer’s payroll department, which may take a pay period or two to take effect.

The rehabilitation agreement must exist before any payment counts. Payments made before a signed rehabilitation agreement are not retroactively applied to the nine-payment count. If you have been paying your collections account voluntarily for two months without signing a rehabilitation agreement, those payments do not count. This is the mistake that restarts the clock for more borrowers than any other.

The 6 disqualifiers that break rehabilitation

The six scenarios below account for most failed rehabilitation attempts.

1. Wage garnishment payments counted as voluntary payments. Borrowers assume that garnishment payments advance their rehabilitation count. They do not. Only payments the borrower initiates voluntarily count. A borrower whose entire monthly obligation is met by garnishment is making zero qualifying payments toward rehabilitation.

2. Tax refund offsets counted toward the nine. The Treasury Offset Program intercepts tax refunds and applies them to defaulted federal debt. These offsets do not count as voluntary payments. If you are expecting a tax refund this year, do not count on it to serve as a rehabilitation payment. It will be credited to your balance, not your payment count.

3. Payments before a signed rehabilitation agreement. Some borrowers begin paying their collections account when contacted, assuming the payments qualify. They only qualify if a written rehabilitation agreement is in place first. Get the agreement signed before sending the first payment.

4. Estimated payments without income documentation. Collectors sometimes accept verbal payment estimates without requiring the Loan Rehabilitation Income and Expense form. If the payment amount is not formally agreed to in writing with documentation, the collector can retroactively disqualify those payments as not meeting the reasonable-and-affordable standard. Always complete the written form. Do not trust a verbal arrangement.

5. Phantom plan payments. Some collections contractors accept monthly payments from borrowers in a structure that looks like rehabilitation but is not formally documented as such. The borrower makes payments for months and then discovers no rehabilitation agreement was ever opened in the Department of Education’s system. Request written confirmation from your loan holder that the rehabilitation program has been formally initiated in the system — not just that you are on a payment plan.

6. Missing the 20-day window on any single payment. A payment received on day 21 or later does not count. The 10-month clock does not pause. If you use paper check, mail it at least 10 business days before the due date. Electronic transfer is the safest method.

The collector’s function is to collect on the debt. Your function is to make sure payments are advancing your rehabilitation count. These are not the same objective. Request written confirmation of your rehabilitation agreement, written confirmation of your payment count after each payment posts, and a written summary of your remaining payments before month nine.

What happens after your loan is rehabilitated

After the 9th qualifying payment posts and the loan holder confirms completion:

Default cleared from credit report. All three credit bureaus — Experian, TransUnion, and Equifax — receive notification to remove the default notation. Negative payment history before the default, including late payments and delinquencies, remains on your report. The removal is specifically the default entry.

Loan transferred to a regular servicer. The loan moves from the collections contractor back into the standard student loan servicer system. You receive a new loan servicer and a new repayment statement.

Repayment options restored. You become eligible for income-driven repayment plans — SAVE, IBR, PAYE, and ICR — as well as deferment, forbearance, and loan forgiveness programs including Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF). PSLF requires 120 qualifying payments while working for a government or qualifying nonprofit employer. All of these options are suspended while you are in default. Rehabilitation gives them back.

Federal student aid eligibility restored. If you lost eligibility for federal financial aid due to default, rehabilitation restores it. This matters if you plan to return to school.

Credit score impact. The credit score improvement from removing a default notation varies significantly by individual situation. For most borrowers, the effect is positive but takes several months to show in credit scores as the bureaus process the update.

Rehabilitation vs. consolidation: the key difference

Consolidation is the faster alternative to rehabilitation for exiting default. You can consolidate out of default in a few weeks rather than 9 to 10 months. The critical tradeoff: consolidation does not remove the default from your credit report. The default record remains, but the loan status changes from default to paid-and-consolidated.

Choose rehabilitation when you need the default removed from your credit report — for a mortgage application, a security clearance renewal, or any context where the default notation specifically creates a problem.

Choose consolidation when speed is the priority and the default notation is less consequential than restoring your repayment options quickly. Consolidation also allows you to combine multiple defaulted loans into a single payment in a way rehabilitation does not.

How to start the rehabilitation process

Contact the Federal Student Aid Default Resolution Group at studentaid.gov/manage-loans/default/get-out or call 1-800-621-3115. They are the first point of contact for all federal loan rehabilitation. They will either process your application directly or refer you to the appropriate collections contractor managing your loan.

After completing rehabilitation, review federal programs that help with student loan repayment to understand which forgiveness paths you become eligible for once your loan returns to good standing. Borrowers also managing other debt alongside their student loans may find government and nonprofit programs that help with credit card debt useful. And if you have already rehabilitated one loan and are considering your options for others, private loan forgiveness options covers alternative resolution paths.

Have your income and expense documentation ready at the first call. The loan holder will calculate your reasonable-and-affordable payment during that conversation or ask you to submit the income documentation form online. Do not send any money before you receive and sign the written rehabilitation agreement.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and is not financial, legal, or tax advice. Programs, rates, and eligibility rules change frequently. Consult a licensed professional or the relevant government agency for guidance specific to your situation.

FAQ

Do I qualify for rehabilitation if my loans are already being garnished?

Yes. Wage garnishment does not disqualify you from rehabilitation. It simply means those garnished funds do not count toward your nine payments. You must make separate voluntary payments in addition to any garnishment being collected. After 5 qualifying voluntary payments post, you can request that garnishment be suspended.

What documents do I need to start rehabilitation?

The Loan Rehabilitation Income and Expense form requires documentation of your monthly gross income — a recent pay stub, SSA benefit letter, or most recent tax return if self-employed — and your monthly necessary expenses: rent or mortgage statement, utility bills, childcare receipts, medical expenses. The more thorough your documentation, the lower your reasonable-and-affordable payment can be.

Does the OBBBA change affect my rehabilitation options before July 1, 2027?

No. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act’s two-rehabilitation provision does not take effect until July 1, 2027. Until that date, the existing one-rehabilitation-per-loan rule applies. If you have not previously used rehabilitation on a loan, you have one opportunity. Borrowers who previously rehabilitated and defaulted again must use consolidation until the OBBBA provision takes effect.

How long does rehabilitation take from start to finish?

A minimum of 9 months and a maximum of 10. Borrowers who start with complete income documentation and submit the rehabilitation agreement in the first week of month one can complete the process in 9 calendar months. The loan transfer to a new servicer typically takes an additional 2 to 4 weeks after the final payment posts.

Can I get out of default faster with Direct Loan Consolidation instead?

Yes, consolidation can resolve a default in 3 to 6 weeks. The tradeoff is that the default notation stays on your credit report with consolidation, while rehabilitation removes it. If you are not applying for credit in the next year, consolidation may be the pragmatic path. If the default on your report is blocking a specific goal — a mortgage, a lease, a job background check — rehabilitation is the right choice.

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