The delinquency is on your credit report for 7 years. After that you can request it be removed.
Federally subsidized student loans have no end date. These can not be discharged. This is the top reason that school tuition rates have skyrocketed. The lenders can loan people with no income vast sums of money little to no risk.
I had a roommate in college who married a citizen of another country. He applied and got approval for a work visa in their spouses native country. Before they left they paid off their federal student loans with credit cards. Something like $20-25K. They also had private student loans of around $10K. They then moved out of the country and went delinquent on the debt. They ended up moving back to the U.S. around 15 years later. By that time their credit report was empty.
Negative. That’s how long it takes a bankruptcy to fall off your record. Unresolved debt and debt collectors will hound you until it’s taken care of, and screw up your credit for the duration.
Not really, there are time limits where they can’t sue you anymore, and credit agencies will stop reporting the original debt holder, but you’re on the hook for life, usually even if you pay it off if it passes more than one collector.
Sure, as long as you no longer need credit that works out. Also since we’re talking the US, that’s as long as you don’t need a job, to rent, to drive, or do anything else that requires a credit check.
It depends on the laws in each country. As long as creditors send reminders of the debt the debt will never disappear in my country. Unless you go personal bankruptcy. And that is both good/bad for you in the future.
Doesn’t debts just go away after 7 years?
What are they gonna do, seize all my (non-existent) property?
Depends on the state you live in.
First there is the debt collectors ability to sue to collect. This varies by state and the type of debt in the U.S.
https://www.forbes.com/advisor/debt-relief/debt-relief-statute-of-limitations-debt-collection-by-state/
The delinquency is on your credit report for 7 years. After that you can request it be removed.
Federally subsidized student loans have no end date. These can not be discharged. This is the top reason that school tuition rates have skyrocketed. The lenders can loan people with no income vast sums of money little to no risk.
I had a roommate in college who married a citizen of another country. He applied and got approval for a work visa in their spouses native country. Before they left they paid off their federal student loans with credit cards. Something like $20-25K. They also had private student loans of around $10K. They then moved out of the country and went delinquent on the debt. They ended up moving back to the U.S. around 15 years later. By that time their credit report was empty.
Negative. That’s how long it takes a bankruptcy to fall off your record. Unresolved debt and debt collectors will hound you until it’s taken care of, and screw up your credit for the duration.
Not really, there are time limits where they can’t sue you anymore, and credit agencies will stop reporting the original debt holder, but you’re on the hook for life, usually even if you pay it off if it passes more than one collector.
On you’re “in the hook for life”, but they also can’t sue you to force you to pay?
Well then just ignore them.
Sure, as long as you no longer need credit that works out. Also since we’re talking the US, that’s as long as you don’t need a job, to rent, to drive, or do anything else that requires a credit check.
But if I can’t get a job due to debt how do they expect me to pay it? What a dumb system…
In Germany there’s a process that works that way (“Privatinsolvenz”, personal bankruptcy).
It depends on the laws in each country. As long as creditors send reminders of the debt the debt will never disappear in my country. Unless you go personal bankruptcy. And that is both good/bad for you in the future.