U.S. Student Loan Debt Statistics | LendingTree (2024)

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U.S. Student Loan Debt Statistics | LendingTree (2)

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U.S. Student Loan Debt Statistics | LendingTree (3)

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Americans owe $1.77 trillion in student loan debt. And while the Biden administration attempted to shrink that amount by an estimated $430 billion, the Supreme Court in late June blocked the president’s student loan forgiveness plan.

This was crushing news for borrowers who’d already been approved for up to $20,000 in student loan relief. On top of that, federal student loan repayments will restart in October after being paused since March 2020.

The administration’s new SAVE repayment plan is expected to automatically forgive $39 billion in student loan debt — but that’s a far cry from the wider $430 billion plan.

As student loan repayments draw closer, our student loan debt statistics page looks at the burdens borrowers face. Continue reading for more.

On this page

  • Key student loan debt statistics
  • Federal student loan portfolio
  • Federal and private student loan debt by state
  • Private student loan debt statistics
  • Public Service Loan Forgiveness statistics
  • Sources

Key student loan debt statistics

  • Americans own $1.77 trillion in federal and private student loan debt as of the second quarter of 2023. That’s up 1.25% from the second quarter of 2022. $128.77 billion of that total through March 31, 2023, is private student loan debt.
  • Students and parents borrowed an estimated $94.7 billion in the 2021-22 academic year. 46% of this was federal unsubsidized loans, 16% was federal subsidized loans, 13% was Grad PLUS loans, 13% was private or other nonfederal loans and 11% was Parent PLUS loans.
  • 54% of the class of 2021 bachelor’s degree recipients who graduated from four-year public and private nonprofit colleges had student loan debt. They left school with an average of $29,100 in federal and private student loan debt. Those who graduated from private nonprofits had $33,000 in debt, while those from public colleges had $27,400 in debt. Private school graduates were slightly more likely to leave school with debt than public school graduates — 55% versus 53%.
  • 45.3 million borrowers have federal student debt as of the second quarter of fiscal year 2022. That’s down slightly from 45.4 million in the second quarter of fiscal year 2021.
  • 0.63% of student loans are 90 days or more delinquent as of the second quarter of 2023. That’s down from 4.55% in the second quarter of 2022 and 10.75% in the first quarter of 2020 at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Historic look at federal and private student loan debt

QuarterTotal debt (in millions)
Q1 2006$480,966.98
Q2 2006$487,126.04
Q3 2006$510,548.46
Q4 2006$521,382.49
Q1 2007$544,988.55
Q2 2007$549,270.83
Q3 2007$577,380.56
Q4 2007$589,489.28
Q1 2008$619,315.89
Q2 2008$626,605.60
Q3 2008$660,584.20
Q4 2008$675,952.58
Q1 2009$707,226.80
Q2 2009$712,319.16
Q3 2009$746,522.52
Q4 2009$771,699.75
Q1 2010$800,069.82
Q2 2010$811,148.77
Q3 2010$845,804.78
Q4 2010$855,483.43
Q1 2011$896,848.42
Q2 2011$905,157.15
Q3 2011$940,339.02
Q4 2011$959,823.95
Q1 2012$994,279.74
Q2 2012$1,011,259.92
Q3 2012$1,041,034.04
Q4 2012$1,054,565.11
Q1 2013$1,092,013.85
Q2 2013$1,099,606.79
Q3 2013$1,134,180.98
Q4 2013$1,145,550.75
Q1 2014$1,182,061.19
Q2 2014$1,190,488.72
Q3 2014$1,226,394.06
Q4 2014$1,235,751.47
Q1 2015$1,271,844.96
Q2 2015$1,278,764.93
Q3 2015$1,311,766.42
Q4 2015$1,320,248.14
Q1 2016$1,358,137.44
Q2 2016$1,365,269.84
Q3 2016$1,398,573.21
Q4 2016$1,405,332.16
Q1 2017$1,440,358.57
Q2 2017$1,446,680.08
Q3 2017$1,479,029.56
Q4 2017$1,488,895.48
Q1 2018$1,523,343.77
Q2 2018$1,530,756.56
Q3 2018$1,560,681.66
Q4 2018$1,566,903.43
Q1 2019$1,597,654.08
Q2 2019$1,603,292.89
Q3 2019$1,635,131.96
Q4 2019$1,637,880.71
Q1 2020$1,671,968.77
Q2 2020$1,672,503.13
Q3 2020$1,696,474.62
Q4 2020$1,693,860.24
Q1 2021$1,718,706.55
Q2 2021$1,719,067.51
Q3 2021$1,739,443.83
Q4 2021$1,733,415.18
Q1 2022$1,747,455.51
Q2 2022$1,744,007.00
Q3 2022$1,761,742.00
Q4 2022$1,764,067.41
Q1 2023$1,774,909.90
Q2 2023$1,765,763.08

Source: Federal Reserve

Federal student loan portfolio

Data from the U.S. Department of Education’s Federal Student Aid office allows us to dive into how much federal student loan debt borrowers carry by loan program, repayment plan and more. The following data is from the second quarter of 2023 (except for the servicer information, which is updated as of March 2023).

Federal student loan debt statistics by loan program

Loan programDollars outstandingRecipients
Direct loans$1,446.0 billion38.3 million borrowers
FFEL loans$194.7 billion8.7 million borrowers
Perkins loans$3.7 billion1.2 million borrowers
Total (all federal)$1,644.5 billion43.6 million unduplicated borrowers

Federal student loan debt statistics by loan debt

Loan debtDollars outstandingRecipients
Stafford subsidized$296.2 billion30.3 million borrowers
Stafford unsubsidized$584.9 billion30.7 million borrowers
Stafford combined$881.1 billion34.9 million unique recipients
Grad PLUS$100.7 billion1.7 million borrowers
Parent PLUS$111.7 billion3.7 million borrowers
Perkins$3.7 billion1.2 million borrowers
Consolidation$547.3 billion10.7 million borrowers

Federal student loan debt statistics by loan status (direct loan program)

Loan statusDollars outstandingRecipients
Loans in repayment$10.1 billion0.3 million borrowers
Loans in deferment$113.8 billion3.1 million borrowers
Loans in forbearance$1,082.2 billion26.7 million borrowers
Loans in default$101.4 billion4.6 million borrowers
Loans in grace period$18.4 billion1.0 million borrowers

Federal student loan debt statistics by repayment plan (direct loan program)

Repayment planDollars outstandingRecipients
Level repayment plan (10 years or less)$211.2 billion10.7 million borrowers
Level repayment plan (greater than 10 years)$77.3 billion1.8 million borrowers
Graduated repayment plan (10 years or less)$84.8 billion2.9 million borrowers
Graduated repayment plan (greater than 10 years)$15.7 billion0.3 million borrowers
Income-contingent (ICR)$39.0 billion0.8 million borrowers
Income-based (IBR)$162.9 billion2.6 million borrowers
Pay As You Earn (PAYE)$113.5 billion1.5 million borrowers
Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE)$197.1 billion3.3 million borrowers
Alternative$44.2 billion1.3 million borrowers

Federal student loan debt by servicer

RepaymentDefermentForbearanceIn-schoolGrace
Outstanding (billions)Recipients (millions)Outstanding (billions)Recipients (millions)Outstanding (billions)Recipients (millions)Outstanding (billions)Recipients (millions)Outstanding (billions)Recipients (millions)
Great Lakes$1.30.03$9.00.22$131.42.89$5.00.22$1.00.05
Nelnet$1.30.05$39.01.07$335.79.69$37.61.92$6.40.35
Aidvantage$3.10.12$22.90.59$263.26.58$14.70.75$2.90.15
MOHELA$4.00.09$24.50.66$298.55.92$23.91.30$3.50.18
Edfinancial$0.70.03$15.30.49$76.82.97$24.21.26$3.40.18
OSLA$0.00.00$4.90.18$14.50.72$8.20.55$1.20.09

Federal and private student loan debt by state

Here’s a LendingTree analysis of student loan debt by state based on the anonymized credit reports of more than 150,000 LendingTree users in December 2022. Check out our page for more detailed statistics at the state level.

Average student loan debt by state

RankStateAverage balance
1District of Columbia$60,037
2Maryland$53,141
3Georgia$50,390
4Florida$50,005
5Delaware$48,863
6Alabama$47,612
7Virginia$47,507
8New Hampshire$47,072
9Illinois$46,575
10Mississippi$45,940
11New York$45,933
12North Carolina$45,680
13South Carolina$45,619
14New Jersey$45,153
15Tennessee$44,549
16Michigan$44,296
17Kentucky$43,840
18Connecticut$43,695
19Rhode Island$43,336
20Colorado$43,157
21Idaho$43,094
22Missouri$42,937
23Arkansas$42,673
24Massachusetts$42,582
25Oregon$42,332
26Pennsylvania$42,243
27Washington$42,201
28Iowa$41,599
29Arizona$41,597
30Ohio$41,552
31Texas$41,299
32California$40,945
33Nevada$40,747
34Louisiana$40,696
35Hawaii$40,263
36Wisconsin$40,096
37Alaska$39,912
38Indiana$39,907
39Montana$39,645
40Kansas$39,460
41Oklahoma$39,455
42Vermont$39,330
43North Dakota$38,665
44Utah$37,661
45Minnesota$37,651
46New Mexico$37,580
47Maine$35,778
48Nebraska$35,727
49South Dakota$34,052
50West Virginia$33,856
51Wyoming$29,809

Source: Analysis of anonymized credit reports of more than 150,000 LendingTree users in December 2022. Note: Includes federal and private student loans.

Private student loan debt statistics

While certain sources track federal and private student loan data together, others gather based on private loans alone. Here’s a closer look at some stats in that realm:

  • Americans owe an estimated $128.77 billion to private student lenders as of the first quarter of 2023. This accounts for an estimated 7.3% of total outstanding federal and private student loan debt.
  • 14 contributors to the Enterval Analytics Private Student Loan Report — Citizens Bank, Discover Bank, Navient, PNC Bank, Sallie Mae Bank, SoFi, College Ave Student Loans, Navy Federal Credit Union and six members from the Education Finance Council — account for $58.48 billion of that $128.77 billion total.
  • Undergraduate loans account for 88.93% and graduate loans account for 11.07% of the outstanding balance held by those 14 contributors.
  • Among the private student loans held by those contributors as of the end of the first quarter of 2023, 76.3% are in repayment, 19.3% are in deferment, 3.0% are in a grace period and 1.4% are in forbearance.
  • 1.44% of private student loans are 90 days or more delinquent as of the first quarter of 2023, compared with 1.30% the year prior.
  • 90.30% of undergraduate and 65.42% of graduate private loans were cosigned during the 2022-23 academic year.

Public Service Loan Forgiveness statistics

LendingTree has an in-depth student loan forgiveness statistics roundup that looks at various types of programs. Still, we thought we’d provide a separate breakdown of the latest on the most impactful program — Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF).

The Federal Student Aid data here is through March 2023 — the latest available — and looks at the PSLF programs as a whole, including PSLF, Temporary Expanded PSLF (TEPSLF) and the limited waiver:

  • PSLF borrowers with one or more approved PSLF employment certification forms and a positive loan balance: 2,018,181
  • Total combined PSLF forms submitted: 5,462,098, with 3,139,959 completed forms
  • Unique borrowers granted PSLF (PSLF, TEPSLF and waiver): 500,519 (versus 388,216 through January 2023)
  • Average balance forgiven (PSLF, TEPSLF and waiver): $68,547 (versus $68,707 through January 2023)

Sources

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U.S. Student Loan Debt Statistics | LendingTree (2024)

FAQs

What are the statistics on US student loan debt? ›

43.2 million borrowers have federal student loan debt. The average federal student loan debt balance is $37,088, while the total average balance (including private loan debt) may be as high as $39,981. Less than 2% of private student loans enter default as of 2021's fourth financial quarter (2021 Q4).

How many total student loan borrowers owe more than $100,000? ›

45% of federal borrowers owe less than $20,000 in student loan debt. 10% of borrowers owe more than $100,000. The federal government forgives student loans at a rate of $95.45 per indebted student borrower.

Is $10,000 a lot of student loan debt? ›

Federal Student Loans by Age

Borrowers between the ages of 25 and 34 carry about $500 billion in federal student loans—the majority of people in this age group owe between $10,000 and $40,000. However, people carry their education debt well into middle-age and beyond.

Is $40,000 student loans a lot? ›

Just because the average student graduates with nearly $40,000 worth of student loans to repay, it doesn't mean you have to choose between college or debt. There are ways to minimize the cost of college, and the amount you need to take out in loans, such as: Save up for college during a gap year.

How many people aren't paying student loans? ›

Federal loan borrowers in repayment: 25.7 million. Federal loan borrowers in deferment: 3 million. Federal loan borrowers with loans in forbearance: 1.2 million. Federal loan borrowers in default: 4.4 million.

Why is student loan debt a problem? ›

More debt and less support have undeniably led to long-term debt burden and severe financial consequences. Although more students of color are attending college and pursuing the “American Dream,” student debt has delayed them from purchasing homes, starting businesses, and building generational wealth.

What do 63% of student loan borrowers worry about according to Ramsey research? ›

According to a Ramsey Solutions research study, 63% of student-loan borrowers worry consistently about paying back the money, and 44% of them say they can't even buy a house because of their student-loan debt. Yikes. The good news is, you can graduate debt-free.

Who owns most of student debt? ›

Student loans in the U.S. are generally either owned by the federal government or financial institutions. The federal government fully guarantees almost all student loans. Some student loans are held by agencies like Sallie Mae or a third-party loan servicing company.

Which country has the highest student loan debt? ›

Globally, student loan debt in the U.S. is second only to the United Kingdom, according to a 2022 Lending Tree report. Before the pandemic, Samuelian worked full time at a pharmaceutical company and made regular repayments. But she still had to pick up a side job waitressing for additional income to pay her bills.

How many Americans have $1,000,000 in student debt? ›

Click here for the ready-to-go slides for this Question of the Day that you can use in your classroom. Behind the numbers (WSJ): Due to escalating tuition and easy credit, the U.S. has 101 people who owe at least $1 million in federal student loans, according to the Education Department.

What is the average age people pay off student loans? ›

A 2019 study from New York Life found that the average age when people finally pay off their student loans for good is 45.

What percentage of America is debt free? ›

Around 23% of Americans are debt free, according to the most recent data available from the Federal Reserve. That figure factors in every type of debt, from credit card balances and student loans to mortgages, car loans and more. The exact definition of debt free can vary, though, depending on whom you ask.

Why is college debt not worth it? ›

Key Takeaways. Carrying student debt can affect your ability to buy a home if your debt-to-income ratio is too high. If you have too much student loan debt, you won't be able to save as much for retirement. Student loan debt can lower your credit score, especially if you fail to make on-time payments.

Is it normal to have 100k in student loans? ›

Only a small percentage—about 6% of borrowers—owe $100,000 or more. Nationally, the average student loan balance per borrower is $39,032, so if you have $100,000 in student loan debt, you have about 2.5 times the national average balance.

Is paying off student loans worth it? ›

Key takeaways. Paying off student loans early can benefit you financially, but it should typically come second to building your emergency fund and retirement savings. People with private student loans or without other debt tend to benefit more from paying off student loans early.

How much does the average American have in student loan debt? ›

Education debt balances by state
StateAverage student loan debt
Illinois$37,714
New York$37,531
Hawaii$37,456
California$37,211
47 more rows
Jan 23, 2024

How long does it take the average person to pay off student loans? ›

On average, people with student loans have spent just over 21 years paying back their loans. Federal student loans offer repayment plans that last from 10 to 30 years. Private student loan repayment terms vary.

Who has the most student loan debt by race? ›

Student Loan Debt is Common Across All Race and Gender Groups, Especially for Black Women
  • White men. 15.7%
  • White women. 19.9%
  • Black men. 32.1%
  • Black women. 43.3%
  • Hispanic men. 18.9%
  • Hispanic women. 24.1%
  • Other race or multi-racial, men. 18.1%
  • Other race or multi-racial, women. 16%
Jan 10, 2024

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