Federal Perkins Loan Rehabilitation
Federal Perkins Student Loan rehabilitation is achieved by
making twelve consecutive, on-time monthly payments on a defaulted Perkins
Loan. Rehabilitation removes a loan from default. (A borrower may regain
eligibility for Title IV funds after six consecutive, on-time monthly payments; however
the loan is still considered to be in default.) A borrower must make a request to
Austin Peay State University (or its contracted collection agency) in order to pursue
rehabilitation of a defaulted Perkins Loan.
- Twelve payments are required. For example, a borrower
is not allowed to make six monthly double payments.
- The twelve payments must be made monthly, even if the
borrower had been on a quarterly or semi-annual repayment plan prior to defaulting.
- There can be no gaps in the twelve payments. If a
borrower misses a payment, the "streak" is broken and the borrower must begin
again in the attempt to make the twelve consecutive payments.
- The definition of "on-time" is at the discretion
of the school.
- The payment amount is determined jointly by the school (or
its representative, i.e. collection agency) and the borrower. There is no minimum payment
amount. This is true even if the borrower's promissory note dictates a minimum
payment amount; the terms of the promissory note do not apply to defaulted loans.
- A borrower may rehabilitate a loan only once,
but there is not limit to the number of times a borrower may attempt to make twelve
consecutive, on-time monthly payments.
All defaulted Perkins Loan borrowers are eligible for
rehabilitation. This includes borrowers who have a judgment rendered on their loan.
However, borrower payments on a loan on which a judgment has been rendered must be
"voluntary." Any payments that are equal to the amount the borrower is
required to make under the judgment are considered voluntary.
The benefits of rehabilitation are the following:
- restoration of Title IV eligibility;
- restoration of the benefits and privileges of the promissory
note and a return to regular repayment status;
- a new repayment period of up to ten years; and
- removal of the default from the borrower's credit history.
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