Student Loan Statute of Limitations

Rebecca Harding from Graceland University has provided the following information about the Statute of Limitations concerning student loans, including Bankruptcy from Title 20 Education statutes. Patricia Peoples from the University of Miami provided additional information concerning the Title 11 bankruptcy statutes. This document, previously "Perkins Bankruptcy Statute of Limitations ", has been updated to reflect the overall topic of student loan statutes of limitations, including bankruptcy. Bankruptcy was previously documented in Regulation Notice 12: Amendment to Bankruptcy Law and Regulation Notice 2: H.R. 6 makes loans nondischargable (originally provided by Linda Dotson from San Diego State University).

In short, there is no statute of limitations on student loans. The following text is reproduced from US Code, Title 20, Section 1091a from Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute site (see http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/20/1091a.text.html).

US Code as of: 01/05/99

Sec. 1091a. Statute of limitations, and State court judgments

The Title 11 provision was amended by the Higher Education Amendments of 1998 [Title 20 U.S.C. 971(a) (b)]. In essence, the amendment eliminated from the Bankruptcy Code, at 523(a) (8) *a), the more or less automatic discharge of a student loan after a seven year waiting period, excluding periods of deferment, after a loan first became due. After the effective date of the Title 20 amendment to 523(a)(8), October 1, 1998, any action filed in Bankruptcy which seeks the discharge of federal and certain private student loans must establish that the repayment of same would cause an "undue hardship" on the borrower, without regard to any "statute of limitations". The following text is reproduced from US Code, Title 11, Section 523(a)(8) Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute site (see http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/11/523.html).

US Code as of: 01/05/99

Sec. 523. Exceptions to discharge