Title 20 › Chapter 28— HIGHER EDUCATION RESOURCES AND STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Subchapter IV— STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Part D— William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program › § 1087d
Requires colleges that take part in the federal Direct Loan program to sign an agreement and run a school loan program that follows Department of Education rules. The school must find students who are eligible, figure each student’s need for the academic year, and can count some other loans against a student’s aid score. The school must certify that any loan it approves fits the yearly and total loan limits, but it may refuse or reduce certification in rare, documented cases and must tell the student in writing. The school must set up a payment schedule, give timely and accurate borrower and eligibility information to the Education Department, follow data rules the Department sets, accept financial responsibility if it fails to do its duties, use a Department-approved quality check system, and not charge students or parents any fees for loan origination or required loan information. Starting July 1, 2026, the school must follow the extra rules about program earnings described below. The Department can add other necessary protections. If a school (or group of schools) agrees to originate loans, that agreement adds similar duties, requires the school to make loans to eligible students and parents, and makes the loan notes the property of the Education Department. The law also bars use of federal loan funds for any program whose median earnings of students who finished the program four years before the review (and who are working and not enrolled) are lower than comparable working adults for at least 2 of the 3 years before the review. Comparable adults are age 25–34, not enrolled, and usually have only a high school diploma for undergraduate comparisons or a bachelor’s for graduate comparisons. The Department uses state or national data and field-of-study data as specified, combines years to reach at least 30 people when needed, gives schools a chance to appeal before cutting off eligibility, requires schools to warn students if a program is at risk, allows reapplication after at least 2 years of ineligibility, and will set procedures for schools to withdraw or be removed.
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Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1087d
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 18, 2026
Release point: 119-83