Credit Score

How Student Loans Affect Your Credit Score

Understand how student loans impact your credit, from building credit history to the effects of deferment, default, and repayment strategies.

F
FixMyCredit99 Team
(Updated October 5, 2024)
10 min read

Key Takeaways

  • On-time payments build positive credit history
  • Student loans add to credit mix (installment debt)
  • Deferment/forbearance doesn't hurt credit directly
  • Default is devastating—avoid at all costs
  • Income-driven repayment doesn't negatively affect credit

How Student Loans Affect Credit

Positive Effects

  • Payment history: On-time payments build positive history (35% of score)
  • Credit mix: Adds installment loan to your mix (10% of score)
  • Credit age: Long-term accounts improve average age
  • Establishes credit: Often first credit for young people

Potential Negative Effects

  • Late payments hurt significantly
  • High total debt (though less impactful than revolving debt)
  • Multiple loans may look like many accounts
  • Default is severely damaging

Student Loan Credit Impact

  • Type of credit: Installment loan
  • Payment history weight: 35% of score
  • Credit mix benefit: Yes
  • Utilization impact: Minimal (not revolving)

Student Loans Can Build Great Credit

Many people with student loans have excellent credit scores. The key is consistent on-time payments. Student loans are one of the most accessible ways for young people to establish credit history.

Payment Status and Your Credit

On-Time Payments

  • Reported as "current" or "pays as agreed"
  • Builds positive payment history
  • Even minimum payments count as on-time
  • Autopay helps prevent missed payments

Late Payments

  • 30+ days late is reported to credit bureaus
  • Can drop score 50-100+ points
  • Stays on report for 7 years
  • More recent late payments hurt more

Income-Driven Repayment (IDR)

  • Reported as current if you make required payments
  • Even $0 payments on IBR/PAYE are reported as on-time
  • Doesn't negatively affect credit score
  • Interest may capitalize, increasing loan balance

Deferment and Forbearance

How They're Reported

  • Deferment: Account shows as deferred, considered current
  • Forbearance: Account shows in forbearance, considered current
  • Neither counts as late payment
  • Score isn't negatively impacted

Credit Considerations

  • No positive payment history being built
  • Interest may accrue (especially forbearance)
  • Not negative, but not actively building credit
  • Long periods may concern some lenders

Deferment vs. Forbearance

Both protect your credit, but deferment may be better financially. Subsidized loans don't accrue interest during deferment. All loans accrue interest during forbearance.

Default: Severe Credit Consequences

What Happens When You Default

  • Federal loans: Default after 270+ days of non-payment
  • Private loans: Default timeline varies by lender
  • Account reported as defaulted
  • May be sent to collections
  • Wage garnishment possible (federal)
  • Tax refund seizure possible (federal)

Credit Score Impact

  • Score can drop 100+ points
  • Default remains for 7 years
  • Collection accounts may appear separately
  • Difficult to qualify for new credit

Recovering from Default

  • Rehabilitation: 9 on-time payments to exit default
  • Consolidation: Combine loans into new loan (exits default)
  • Pay in full: If possible, clears the debt

Federal Student Loan Default

  • Time to default: 270+ days
  • Credit impact: Severe (100+ points)
  • Rehabilitation: 9 payments to exit
  • Report duration: 7 years

Avoid Default at All Costs

Federal student loan default has severe consequences beyond credit damage: wage garnishment, tax refund seizure, and loss of eligibility for future aid. Use income-driven repayment or deferment instead.

Student Loans on Your Credit Report?

Make sure your student loan accounts are being reported accurately. Errors in payment status or loan amounts should be disputed.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Student loans are installment loans that build credit history when paid on time. They add to your credit mix and establish payment history. For many students, they're the first credit account.
No, not directly. Accounts in official deferment or forbearance are reported as current. However, you're not building positive payment history during this time. Interest may still accrue on some loans.
Federal student loan defaults remain on your credit report for 7 years from the date of default. Rehabilitation or consolidation can help, but the original default notation may still appear.
Loan forgiveness itself doesn't directly hurt your credit. The forgiven amount may be taxable income (except PSLF and some other programs). The account is reported as paid or closed, which is neutral to positive.
Not necessarily for credit purposes. On-time payments build credit regardless of how fast you pay. Consider interest rates and other financial goals. Paying minimums on-time is sufficient for credit building.

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