Federal student loan borrowers are pausing payments in greater numbers again. In the third quarter, 3.4 million borrowers deferred payments, up from 3.2 million a year earlier. The increase, while modest, signals a fresh strain on budgets as repayment systems settle after the pandemic pause and inflation lingers.
“Another 3.4 million federal student loan borrowers had deferred their payments in the third quarter of this year, up from 3.2 million a year earlier.”
The data point arrives amid shifting policies and uneven household finances. More than 40 million Americans hold federal student debt. Payments resumed last fall after a three-year freeze. New income-driven plans and targeted relief have helped some borrowers, but many still face higher living costs and rising interest on other debts.
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ToggleWhat A Rise In Deferrals Signals
Deferral is a formal pause granted under federal rules. It is different from forbearance. In many cases, interest on subsidized loans does not grow during a deferral, while unsubsidized loans usually continue to accrue interest. Borrowers often qualify due to school enrollment, unemployment, or economic hardship.
The jump from 3.2 million to 3.4 million represents about a 6 percent increase year over year. That shift suggests more people are seeking breathing room as they juggle rent, childcare, and car payments, along with student debt. It also hints that some borrowers are still struggling to navigate new repayment options.
Policy Whiplash And Servicer Strain
Repayments restarted after the pandemic-era pause ended, with a temporary “on-ramp” that softened penalties for missed payments. At the same time, the Department of Education launched the SAVE income-driven plan, which can lower monthly bills for many low- and middle-income borrowers.
But program changes rolled out while loan servicers faced staffing and call-center backlogs. That led to long wait times and processing delays for some applications. Borrowers who could not get timely guidance may have chosen deferral as the fastest way to avoid delinquency.
- Deferral can preserve credit standing in the short term.
- For unsubsidized loans, interest often continues to add up.
- Income-driven plans may lower payments without pausing progress to forgiveness.
Who Is Hitting Pause
Young graduates entering a cooling job market are frequent users of in-school and unemployment deferments. So are workers in cyclical industries who may face unstable hours. Parents with PLUS loans can also qualify for deferment tied to a dependent’s enrollment.
Rising housing costs play a role. Rent burdens have strained budgets in many metro areas, and homeowners face higher insurance and utilities. Even with wage gains, many households say there is little left after essentials. A short-term deferral can feel like the only workable lever.
What Borrowers Should Weigh
Deferral offers quick relief, but it is not a cure-all. Borrowers should check whether interest will grow and how that affects the total owed. Those on the margin might get more lasting help by switching to an income-driven plan, which can reduce payments and count time toward forgiveness.
For those already in deferral, a yearly check-in is wise. If income changes, updating paperwork could lower payments without pausing progress. And if servicers remain hard to reach, online account portals often provide forms and calculators to compare options.
The Bigger Picture
A sustained rise in deferrals could signal broader financial stress. It can also ripple through public budgets if more borrowers need long-term assistance. On the other hand, a moderate increase may reflect smarter use of safety valves that keep people out of delinquency.
Watch three signals in the months ahead:
- Delinquency and default rates as grace periods fade.
- Enrollment in income-driven plans, especially SAVE.
- Servicer performance, including call wait times and error rates.
The latest uptick is not a crisis, but it is a caution flag. More borrowers are reaching for the pause button even as new repayment tools expand. The difference between short-term relief and long-term strain may hinge on access to clear guidance and stable service. If agencies and servicers can reduce friction, the next report could show fewer pauses—and more progress.







