Federal student loans are completely cancelled when you die — your family owes nothing. Private student loans are more complicated and may fall on a co-signer. Here’s what happens to every type.

What Happens by Loan Type

Loan Type Discharged at Death? Co-signer Liable? Estate Liable?
Federal Direct Subsidized ✅ Yes N/A (no co-signer) ❌ No
Federal Direct Unsubsidized ✅ Yes N/A ❌ No
Federal Direct PLUS (student) ✅ Yes N/A ❌ No
Federal Parent PLUS ✅ Yes (if parent OR student dies) N/A ❌ No
Federal Perkins ✅ Yes N/A ❌ No
Federal FFEL (older loans) ✅ Yes N/A ❌ No
Private student loans ⚠️ Varies by lender ⚠️ Usually yes ⚠️ Often yes

How to Discharge Federal Student Loans

Step Action
1 Contact your loan servicer
2 Request a death discharge application
3 Submit a certified copy of the death certificate
4 Servicer processes the discharge (30-90 days)
5 Any payments made after the date of death are refunded
6 Discharge reported to credit bureaus; loan removed

Private Student Loan Policies (Major Lenders)

Lender Death Discharge Policy
SoFi Discharged upon borrower’s death
Earnest Discharged upon borrower’s death
Discover Discharged upon borrower’s death
Sallie Mae Discharged upon borrower’s death
College Ave Discharged upon borrower’s death
Citizens Bank Policies vary; co-signer may be liable
Wells Fargo Policies vary; co-signer may be liable
Navient (private) Generally discharged for borrower death

Policies change — always check the specific loan agreement and contact the lender directly.

Co-Signer Liability

Situation Co-signer Responsible?
Federal loan (no co-signer exists) N/A
Private loan — lender discharges at death ❌ No
Private loan — lender does NOT discharge ✅ Yes — full remaining balance
Co-signer release was completed before death ❌ No
Private loan in community property state ⚠️ Surviving spouse may be liable

Community Property States

In these states, a surviving spouse may be liable for student loan debt incurred during the marriage:

Community Property States
Arizona
California
Idaho
Louisiana
Nevada
New Mexico
Texas
Washington
Wisconsin

Tax Implications

Situation Taxable?
Federal loan discharged at death ❌ No (through 2025+)
Private loan discharged at death ❌ No (through 2025+)
Loan paid from estate assets N/A — payment, not discharge

The Tax Cuts and Jobs Act exempted student loan death discharges from being treated as income. This provision has been extended.

Parent PLUS Loan Special Rules

Scenario What Happens
Parent borrower dies Loan fully discharged
Student (on whose behalf loan was taken) dies Loan fully discharged
Parent wants to transfer to student Not possible — PLUS stays with parent
Student can consolidate PLUS into own name Only through refinancing with a private lender

The Bottom Line

Federal student loans are fully cancelled at death with no tax consequences — notify the servicer and submit a death certificate. For private loans, check the loan agreement and contact the lender, as policies vary. If you’re a co-signer on a private student loan, understand that you may become responsible for the full balance. Consider life insurance to cover the loan amount if you have co-signed private student loans.

Related: What Happens to Debt When You Die? | What Happens If You Don’t Pay Student Loans?