Student Loan Forgiveness: Taxable or Tax-Free? - VIN Foundation (2024)

Paying back a veterinary school student debt load can be extremely stressful and confusing, particularly when we continue to see updates and changes to existing loan repayment programs.

In the last few years we’ve seen the pandemic forbearance, a special one-time forgiveness count adjustment, and a limited waiver (now expired) helping more borrowers reach Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF).

Analyzing the various federal repayment options, programs, and changes then choosing the best pathway for your situation is challenging to say the least. Helping veterinary students, veterinarians, and those who work with them navigate their student loans and repayment options for more than 10 years, we’ve seen student loan forgiveness and the debates around it cause significant confusion. First, make sure you understand the differences between Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) and the potentially taxable forgiveness available with federal income-driven repayment (IDR) plans. While there is some overlap between the two programs, PSLF is different from IDR.

Many borrowers believe the student loan forgiveness is only open to those working for a non-profit. Anyone with federal student loans can be eligible for forgiveness, regardless of who they work for. PSLF does require you to work for certain non-profit employers, but you can still receive student loan forgiveness even if you never work or worked for a non-profit employer. Income-driven repayment plans result in student loan forgiveness if you reach the maximum repayment period for a specific plan and still have a balance.

Make sure you know the differences between PSLF and IDR forgiveness and whether or not you might be eligible for student loan forgiveness.

PUBLIC SERVICE LOAN FORGIVENESS:

Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) is a federal student loan program that resonates with many veterinary students and veterinarians. This is a benefit provided under the College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007, establishing a pathway to have certain student loans forgiven tax-free after ten years (120 months) of qualifying payments.

The first eligible payments could have been made starting in October 2007. That means we are beyond the ten-year threshold where people can have their student loans forgiven tax-free under PSLF. The early returns were not very encouraging. Numerous issues with the first rules and poor communication led to many denied applications. However, since then we have seen several improvements to help current and future borrowers receive PSLF, even retroactively in many cases.

If you have applied unsuccessfully for PSLF in the past, apply again. In recent years, borrowers have received a number of unique opportunities to help increase their PSLF payment count: Temporary Expanded Public Service Loan Forgiveness (TEPSLF), updated employment requirements that took effect July 1, 2023, and the one-time forgiveness count adjustment.

To date, more than 600,000 borrowers have received $42 billion in PSLF thanks to the various improvements made over the last couple of years.

The low first-round PSLF qualification rate was not a surprise for those who follow the student loan repayment landscape closely. Knowing whether or not you were making qualifying PSLF payments was nearly impossible in the early years of the provision. If you are working towards PSLF, make sure that you are submitting a Public Service Loan Forgiveness Employment Certification Form or using the PSLF electronic help tool at least each year or whenever you change employers. If you do, you can track your progress via your loan servicer (Mohela is the official loan servicer monitoring PSLF progress). You can also see your PSLF qualifying payment count in your student aid data file when you upload it to the VIN Foundation My Student Loans tool. Look for the PSLF Status tab in your My Student Loans report.

Veterinarians may qualify for PSLF if they work in positions such as academia (every U.S. veterinary teaching hospital is a 501c3 nonprofit), shelters, zoos, aquariums, state veterinarians, military veterinarians, working for the USDA veterinarians or any other federal government agency, other university research positions, lab animal medicine, many wildlife organizations, or teaching in veterinary technician programs (excluding private school programs), just to name a few.

Avoid these common concerns and pitfalls when it comes to PSLF:

“They are eliminating Public Service Loan Forgiveness so why should I bother trying?”

PSLF is not going anywhere. While previous administrations have discussed eliminating PSLF and reducing the number of income-driven repayment options, no one has ever proposed eliminating PSLF or IDR forgiveness for existing student loans. Anyone with federal student loans has a master promissory note, i.e. a contract that spells out all of the repayment options and benefits available. Eliminating PSLF or IDR forgiveness for existing student loans would require Congress to break all existing student loan contracts. That is highly unlikely to happen. They have actually gone out of their way to not do that, consistently preserving older student loan provisions until there are no more loans governed under those contracts, or they offer a way to consolidate into a new loan type that has different contractual terms.

What is usually proposed or chatted about in the media is to eliminate or significantly alter PSLF or IDR forgiveness for future borrowers – students who have not started borrowing yet who could have a different contract with different provisions. Don’t worry – nothing like that is even on the table right now.

In fact, Congress passed and the President signed into law TEPSLF in 2018 which expanded the original PSLF benefits and helped borrowers who were denied PSLF the first time around get a second shot at tax-free forgiveness.

Starting on July 1, 2023, several improvements have also been made to the regulations around PSLF qualifying payments:

  • Late and lump sum payments can be PSLF eligible
  • Certain periods of deferment or forbearance can be PSLF eligible
  • Consolidation will no longer restart your PSLF clock. Instead, borrowers who consolidate loans with differing amounts of qualifying payments will receive a weighted average of PSLF credit after consolidating.
  • Relaxed full-time employment requirements to make it easier for some contract employees and those who work at least 30 hours per week for a qualifying employer to receive PSLF credit.

One surefire way to not earn PSLF is to not try or miss out on the new or even time-limited opportunities to receive PSLF credit. Set yourself up for success. Know if you need to consolidate your loans to maximize your PSLF credit or switch to the most beneficial qualifying repayment plan going forward, like SAVE. If you have questions, reach out for help! You can also review the “Most direct path to Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) for Veterinarians” document in the VIN Foundation WikiDebt resource.

TAX-FREE STUDENT LOAN FORGIVENESS UNDER PSLF:

PSLF is a benefit you apply for and might receive IF you do all of the right things for a period of at least 120 months, or 10 years. Before you apply for PSLF, make sure you have made 120 monthly qualifying payments to federal Direct Loans using an income-driven repayment plan (ICR, IBR, PAYE, REPAYE, the new SAVE) or a standard 10-year plan, while working full-time as an employee of a federal, state, local, tribal entity, or 501c3 organization. If you’re working towards PSLF or expect to receive PSLF in the future, then submit the PSLF Employment Certification Form or use the electronic PSLF Help tool at least annually to receive confirmation of your progress.

SPECIAL OPPORTUNITIES: TEPSLF has significantly relaxed the original PSLF requirements and provides a limited pot of money for borrowers who may have been using the wrong repayment TEPSLF will require you to consolidate any non-Direct Loans in order to receive this special retroactive consideration.

TEPSLF will exist until it runs out of funds.

Once you’ve made 120 qualified monthly payments, you can apply to have your remaining student loan balance canceled under PSLF. If granted, your remaining eligible federal student loan balance will be forgiven tax-free. If you qualify for PSLF under TEPSLF or the limited waiver, you can even receive a refund of payments you have made after meeting the 120 qualifying payments.

Student Loan Forgiveness: Taxable or Tax-Free? - VIN Foundation (1)

PSLF is the holy grail of student loan repayment if you can get it! Don’t let the early returns or horror stories dissuade you from earning PSLF. Veterinarians are currently receiving PSLF. Learn from the mistakes of others and you will be eligible for tax-free forgiveness sooner rather than later.

TAXABLE STUDENT LOAN FORGIVENESS:

There is another type of student loan forgiveness that confuses many borrowers, even though they may be using plans where their monthly payments are based on their taxable income. Income-driven repayment plans like ICR, IBR, PAYE, and REPAYE (soon to become SAVE) have maximum repayment periods. The periods are 20 or 25 years depending on your loans and repayment plan. If you reach the maximum number of payments under an income-driven repayment plan, any remaining balance is forgiven. Let’s call this income-driven repayment forgiveness (IDRF).

The two major differences between IDRF and PSLF.

  1. The two major differences between IDRF and PSLF.

    1. IDRF can be treated as taxable income. However, currently there is a tax exemption for anyone who receives student loan forgiveness between 2021 and 2025.
    2. IDRF does not require an application for forgiveness, rather it is automatically granted once you reach the maximum number of payments while using forgiveness-eligible repayment plans.

As noted in the Code of Federal Regulations for income-driven repayment (§682.221and§685.209),“The loan holder determines when a borrower has met the loan forgiveness requirements … and does not require the borrower to submit a request for loan forgiveness.

No later than six months prior to the anticipated date that the borrower will meet the loan forgiveness requirements, the loan holder must send the borrower a written notice…”

Within 6 months of reaching the maximum repayment periods under income-driven repayment, your loan servicer must tell you that you are nearing student loan forgiveness.

The calendar year in which forgiveness occurs will be important because thisforgiven debt will be treated as taxable incomeif the student loan forgiveness tax-exemption is not extended beyond 2025. If considered taxable income, you will report the balance forgiven on your tax return after you receive a1099-C for the amount canceled (aka forgiven). Your tax liability will depend on your total income and the federal (and any state) income tax rates the year forgiveness occurs. To estimate your student loan forgiveness tax liability, review the Forgiveness Planning Module in the VIN Foundation Student Loan Repayment Simulatorand read the WikiDebt section onforgiveness planning.

Avoid these common concerns and pitfalls when it comes to IDR Forgiveness:

“I don’t work for or have never worked for a non-profit, so student loan forgiveness doesn’t apply to me.”

Incorrect. Anyone who has federal student loans has the option to use a forgiveness-eligible repayment plan. PSLF happens to be an additional, accelerated forgiveness option IF you happen to be employed by a qualifying organization while using one of the forgiveness-eligible repayment plans.

PSLF requires you to work for a qualifying organization while making forgiveness-eligible student loan payments for at least 10 years. At that point, you are eligible to apply to have your loans forgiven tax-free under PSLF.

IDR forgiveness requires you to make qualifying payments based on your taxable income and family size for a maximum period of 20 or 25 years (depending on your loan types and repayment plan). If you still have a balance remaining when you reach your maximum repayment period, the remainder is forgiven. Forgiven balances can be treated as taxable income when your loans are canceled. However, the American Rescue Plan has exempted student loan forgiveness from taxability for the tax years 2021-2025.

“I was planning to pay based on my income using an income-driven repayment plan like PAYE, REPAYE or IBR, but after seeing so few people get PSLF, I’m not sure that is the right strategy for me.”

While confusion caused by the early data on PSLF and the constant calls to eliminate student loan forgiveness is certainly understandable, there are details we need to clarify between PSLF and the IDR forgiveness you can earn using repayment plans like ICR, IBR, PAYE, and REPAYE. If you’re unfamiliar with these acronyms, review the VIN FoundationWikiDebt income-driven repayment comparison table.

Not all student loan forgiveness is created equal. There are two general types of student loan forgiveness:1) Public Service Loan Forgiveness which is always tax-free, and 2) Income-Driven Repayment, which can be taxable, unless there is a special tax-exemption in place. Right now, anyone who receives student loan forgiveness between 2021 and 2025 will not have to pay taxes on any amount of student debt forgiveness.

PSLF or IDR forgiveness is a potential result for any borrower. However, not all borrowers will reach forgiveness. Borrowers with a starting student debt to income ratio less than one will likely pay their balance to zero before reaching forgiveness. With a starting student debt to income ratio greater than one, you are likely to reach forgiveness, whether it is under PSLF or IDR. The higher your student debt to income ratio, the more likely you are to reach student loan forgiveness. The difference then becomes when you reach forgiveness and whether or not your forgiveness will be taxable or non-taxable.

The key point is that ANYONE with U.S. federal student loans can be eligible for forgiveness. Even borrowers with older loans can see student loan forgiveness sooner rather than later under the limited one-time forgiveness count adjustment. Make sure you check your eligibility for this extremely beneficial opportunity and act if necessary before the December 31st deadline.

STUDENT LOAN FORGIVENESS TAKE-HOME POINTS:

The early struggles of folks who have applied for PSLF does not mean you will be denied PSLF. There are also numerous current and planned improvements to PSLF to help improve the success rate. Many of the current improvements will provide retroactive PSLF credit to those who normally would not be eligible for it. Know how to receive PSLF credit before some of these opportunities expire if you may have earned it to have your loans forgiven sooner.

Forgiveness received under PSLF is also very different from the forgiveness received under income-driven repayment plans. Taxable forgiveness does not require an application and will happen when/if you reach the maximum repayment period for income-driven repayment. There are additional limited opportunities available to receive retroactive forgiveness credit, regardless of the repayment plan(s) you have been using.

For the majority of recent graduate veterinarians who have federal student loans, income-driven repayment is an essential part of a financial wellness plan. Don’t let the early news on PSLF dissuade you from using income-driven repayment. Also, don’t discount working towards PSLF if that matches with your veterinary career aspirations. If you’re not sure how to evaluate your income-driven repayment plan eligibility or compare the various repayment options, try the tools available on the VIN FoundationStudent Debt Center.

For those who are worried about their student loan repayment options and benefits: read your current master promissory note, review your student loans and repayment options using the VIN Foundation My Student Loans tool, check with your loan servicer on your income-driven repayment and/or PSLF progress, and simulate your remaining costs using the VIN Foundation Student Loan Repayment Simulator.

If you need help, please do not hesitate to reach out to VIN and VIN Foundation for some guided assistance in making sense of your student loans and repayment options.

Student Loan Forgiveness: Taxable or Tax-Free? - VIN Foundation (2)

Tony Bartels, DVM, MBA

Dr. Tony Bartels graduated in 2012 from the Colorado State University combined MBA/DVM program and is an employee of the Veterinary Information Network (VIN) and a VIN Foundation Board member. He and his wife have more than $400,000 in veterinary-school debt that they manage using federal income-driven repayment plans. By necessity (and now obsession), his professional activities include researching and speaking on veterinary-student debt, providing guidance to colleagues on loan-repayment strategies and contributing to VIN Foundation initiatives.

Student Loan Forgiveness: Taxable or Tax-Free? - VIN Foundation (2024)

FAQs

Is student loan forgiveness going to be taxable income? ›

The IRS considers canceled debt, including most forms of student loan debt forgiveness or student loan discharge, to be taxable income. However, borrowers working toward loan forgiveness have been exempt from taxes thanks to the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021.

Do nonprofits count for student loan forgiveness? ›

Nonprofit workers may receive student loan forgiveness through the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program. Before you apply for PSLF forgiveness, make sure you meet the career, payment and eligibility requirements. You may also consider other options if you don't qualify.

What is the tax bomb on student loan forgiveness? ›

A "tax bomb," or in this case a "student loan tax bomb," occurs when a forgiven debt becomes taxable income – meaning the borrower has to pay taxes on that amount. The IRS generally taxes all income sources, including when a creditor cancels, forgives or discharges a debt.

Do I need to report PSLF on taxes? ›

Are loan amounts forgiven under PSLF or TEPSLF considered taxable by the IRS? No. According to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), student loan amounts forgiven under PSLF or TEPSLF aren't considered income for tax purposes.

Will student loans take my taxes in 2024 IRS? ›

Important note: As part of the Fresh Start Program, borrowers with eligible defaulted loans are receiving certain relief measures, including tax refunds (and child tax credits) not being withheld. This relief will continue through at least September 2024.

Is the PSLF program worth it? ›

In summary, the public service loan forgiveness program could be an efficient way to pay off your student loans if you satisfy the requirements needed and have a decent student loan balance. If you are trying for the PSLF program, it is important to communicate with you loan servicer.

What qualifies as a nonprofit for student loan forgiveness? ›

PSLF Eligibility Criteria

You must work for a qualifying non-profit organization that's a 501(c)(3) or government agency full-time for at least ten years while your loans are in repayment. You must make 120 monthly payments under a qualifying payment plan.

What kind of non-profit qualify for student loan forgiveness? ›

After 120 qualifying payments (this usually takes 10 years) employees in certain public service jobs, including at 501(c)(3) charitable nonprofits, may be eligible for loan forgiveness as long as their loans are not in default, and their loans are under a qualifying repayment plan.

What is a qualifying non-profit for loan forgiveness? ›

You must work full time at a nonprofit with a 501(c)(3) designation — or a government organization or another qualifying public service organization. You must repay your loans on an income-driven repayment plan, which caps your loan payments according to your income.

How will student loan forgiveness affect my taxes? ›

Zoom in: Current tax law treats forgiven or canceled debt as taxable income, though there are some exceptions. If student debt is forgiven, it's treated as if the borrower earned additional income equal to the amount of debt forgiven, according to the independent tax policy nonprofit Tax Foundation.

How much tax do you pay on cancellation of debt? ›

If your debt was discharged in a Title 11 bankruptcy proceeding, such as a Chapter 7 or Chapter 13 case, you're not responsible for taxes on that debt. If you can demonstrate to the IRS that you were insolvent at the time the debt was cancelled, you can similarly avoid taxes on that debt.

Is PSLF forgiveness taxable by state? ›

States that have conformed to the federal treatment, do not tax forgiven loans, or announced that they are not taxing the forgiven student loans, include: Alabama. Arizona. California.

Will student loan forgiveness increase taxes for everyone? ›

Student loan forgiveness in 2022 will not increase your federal taxable income, thanks to the latest American Rescue Plan that makes all student loan forgiveness tax-free.

How long does it take for Mohela to process PSLF? ›

A final review of your account will be done to process forgiveness, which will take at least 90 business days. You are required to continue making payments while your form is being processed, unless your account is in a forbearance status.

What are the federal tax brackets for 2024? ›

2024 tax brackets
Tax rateSingle filersMarried couples filing separately
10%$11,600 or less$11,600 or less
12%$11,601 to $47,150$11,601 to $47,150
22%$47,151 to $100,525$47,151 to $100,525
24%$100,526 to $191,950$100,526 to $191,150
3 more rows

What is the tax loan for 2024? ›

No Fee Refund Advance Loans are available after you have filed your tax return starting on January 2, 2024 through February 11, 2024. How is the Refund Advance loan repaid? The amount you owe is deducted directly from your tax refund, if sufficient, to the extent allowed by applicable state law.

Are forgiven student loans taxable in California? ›

California allows an exclusion from gross income for student loan debt that is cancelled or repaid under the income-based repayment programs administered by the U.S. Department of Education.

What is the meaning of discretionary income? ›

Discretionary income is the amount of an individual's income that is left for spending, investing, or saving after paying taxes and paying for personal necessities, such as food, shelter, and clothing. Discretionary income includes money spent on luxury items, vacations, and nonessential goods and services.

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