Title 20 › Chapter 28— HIGHER EDUCATION RESOURCES AND STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Subchapter IV— STUDENT ASSISTANCE › Part G— General Provisions Relating to Student Assistance Programs › § 1091a
Keeps time limits from blocking efforts to collect federal student loans or grant overpayments. Schools that got federal money, guaranty agencies with federal agreements, colleges with federal loan agreements, the Secretary, the Attorney General, or other federal agencies can still sue, enforce judgments, take offsets or garnishments, or use other collection steps even if a state or federal time limit would normally stop them. State laws cannot stop these collections. Borrowers who default must pay reasonable collection costs. People cannot use a claim of being a minor to avoid repayment when a guaranty agency collects a Part B loan or when a college with a federal agreement collects a Part E loan. A state court money judgment that was assigned to the Secretary can be filed in any U.S. district court and treated like a federal district-court judgment. If a student has died, neither the student nor their estate must repay any federal aid, interest, or collection charges.
Full Legal Text
Education — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
20 U.S.C. § 1091a
Title 20 — Education
Last Updated
Apr 5, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60