Lately, though, the pressure has increased. Collection efforts are ramping up. Garnishments are back on the table. And many borrowers are asking a hard but honest question: Is there ever a way out?
The answer isn’t simple, but it’s no longer a flat “no.”
After years of payment pauses and temporary relief programs, federal student loan collections have resumed in full force. That means borrowers who fall behind may face:
Private student loan lenders have never paused collection in the same way, and many have become more aggressive as economic conditions tighten.
For borrowers already stretched thin, these actions can feel overwhelming. They don’t just affect your finances. They affect your sense of stability and control.
You’ve probably heard that student loans “can’t be discharged in bankruptcy.” That belief has kept many people from even exploring their options.
The truth is more nuanced.
Student loans are not automatically discharged like credit cards or medical bills. To eliminate them in bankruptcy, you must show that repayment would cause undue hardship. For years, courts applied this standard harshly, making discharge difficult and unpredictable.
That reality discouraged borrowers from trying at all.
In recent years, the Department of Justice introduced a more structured, borrower-friendly process for evaluating student loan discharge requests in bankruptcy.
Under this streamlined approach, borrowers submit detailed financial information showing their:
The DOJ now works with borrowers’ attorneys to assess these factors more consistently. While discharge is still not guaranteed, the process is clearer, faster, and far more realistic than it used to be.
This is not a loophole or a shortcut. It’s an acknowledgment that lifelong debt isn’t always reasonable or fair.
Bankruptcy may help in several ways, even if student loans are not fully discharged. It helps you eliminate other debts, so you’re able to focus on paying your student loan payments. It can stop wage garnishments and other collection activities by implementing an automatic stay. Bankruptcy also gives you leverage for negotiating settlement and repayment options.
It’s a tool that makes it easier to meet student loan obligations, even if you aren’t able to discharge your student loan in the process.
The key is understanding whether your situation meets the legal criteria and whether bankruptcy fits into your broader financial picture.
If you’re struggling with student loan debt, it doesn’t mean you failed. Education was supposed to open doors, not close them. Sometimes life doesn’t unfold the way anyone plans.
The law is slowly catching up to that reality.
Bankruptcy isn’t about shirking responsibility or walking away from a debt.
Instead, it’s about recognizing when a debt has become unmanageable. It gives you space to deal with your financial issues and actually take responsibility for your debts.
It might be your first real chance to reset and move forward without constant fear of garnishment or collection.
Is student loan debt controlling your financial future? Speaking with an experienced bankruptcy attorney can help you understand your options clearly and honestly. For more information or to discuss your debt situation with an expert, contact R. Flay Cabiness, II, P.C. at (912) 417-5041 (Brunswick, GA); (912) 809-2141 (Hazlehurst, GA) or (912) 324-3176 (Jesup, GA) to schedule a consultation.
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