Title 20 › Chapter CHAPTER 28— - HIGHER EDUCATION RESOURCES AND STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER IV— - STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Part Part B— - Federal Family Education Loan Program › § 1083
Lenders that make federal student loans must give the borrower clear, easy-to-understand loan information before or when they give the loan. The lender must give the borrower a written or electronic disclosure and a phone number (and can give an email). The notice must say plainly that the money is a loan that must be paid back, name the lender and where to send payments, show the loan principal, list fees and how they will be paid, state the interest rate, and explain special rules for student and parent loans about paying or capitalizing interest and deferring payments. It must also show yearly and lifetime loan limits, the borrower’s total balance with that lender and an estimated monthly payment, when payments and interest start, available repayment plans, minimum and maximum repayment terms, consolidation or refinancing options, the right to prepay without penalty, when deferment or forbearance or forgiveness might apply, what happens if the borrower defaults (including reporting to credit agencies), and any fees or collection costs. Before repayment begins, and again when the loan is approved, the lender must send more details. At least 30 days and no more than 150 days before the first payment is due, the lender must send a statement with the lender or servicer name and address, the repayment start date, the estimated balance (including any interest that will be added), interest rate(s), any repayment benefits and limits, the repayment schedule (first due date, number, amount, and frequency of payments), total projected interest if payments follow the schedule, fees that may be charged, and places for help (including the Department’s Student Loan Ombudsman). Lenders must bill each payment period with current balance, interest rate, total interest paid so far, total paid, recent fees, due date to avoid extra fees, contact info for billing problems, and a reminder that repayment plans can be changed. If a borrower tells the lender they are having trouble, the lender must explain repayment plan options, forbearance rules and costs, and ways to avoid default. If a borrower is 60 days late, the lender must warn when the loan will default, the minimum payment to avoid default, options to avoid default (including deferment and forbearance), possible discharge options, and help resources. All required information must be free. Not giving the notices does not cancel the borrower’s duty to repay or create a damage claim, but the Secretary may limit or stop a lender’s participation for not following these rules.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1083
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73