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?