Table of Contents
- Student Loan Scams: A $1.7 Trillion Target
- Fake Student Loan Forgiveness Programs
- Consolidation and Refinancing Scams
- Debt Relief Company Fraud
- Student Loan Phishing Attacks
- FAFSA and Financial Aid Scams
- Scholarship Scams
- Legitimate Student Loan Help: Free Resources
- How to Protect Yourself
- FAQ: Student Loan Scams
Student Loan Scams: A $1.7 Trillion Target
Americans collectively owe over $1.7 trillion in student loan debt, with approximately 43 million borrowers carrying federal student loans alone. This massive debt burden, combined with the complexity of federal loan programs and the constantly shifting political landscape around student loan forgiveness, creates the perfect environment for scammers. Borrowers who are stressed, confused, and desperate for relief are prime targets for fraud.
The Federal Trade Commission and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) have taken enforcement action against dozens of student loan scam companies, but the problem persists because new fraudulent operations emerge as quickly as old ones are shut down. In 2026, the ongoing political debate around student loan forgiveness has created even more confusion, which scammers exploit by offering fake "guaranteed" forgiveness programs.
This guide covers the most common student loan scams targeting borrowers in 2026, how to identify them, and where to find legitimate, free help with your student loans.
You never have to pay anyone to access federal student loan programs. Income-driven repayment plans, deferment, forbearance, Public Service Loan Forgiveness, and all other federal programs are free to apply for through your loan servicer or studentaid.gov. Any company charging fees for these services is taking your money for something you can do yourself at no cost.
Fake Student Loan Forgiveness Programs
How Fake Forgiveness Scams Work
Scammers claim to offer "guaranteed" or "immediate" student loan forgiveness through a special program, insider connections, or legal loopholes. They charge upfront fees of $500 to $5,000 or more, collect your FSA ID login credentials, and either do nothing or enroll you in programs you could have accessed for free. Some make payments on your behalf initially (using your own money) to create the illusion the service is working.
The student loan forgiveness scam is the most prevalent form of student loan fraud. Scammers capitalize on the political discourse around student loan forgiveness by suggesting they can get your loans forgiven through channels not available to the public. In reality, there are no secret forgiveness programs. Every legitimate federal forgiveness pathway (PSLF, IDR forgiveness, borrower defense) is publicly documented and free to apply for.
Common Tactics
- "Biden/Congressional forgiveness" claims: Scammers reference real political proposals but claim they can enroll you immediately in programs that do not yet exist or that have been struck down by courts
- Urgency and deadlines: "This program closes in 48 hours" or "Only 500 spots remaining." Federal programs do not have arbitrary enrollment deadlines
- Requesting your FSA ID: This is the most dangerous element. Your Federal Student Aid (FSA) ID is the equivalent of your signature on federal loan documents. Scammers who obtain it can change your repayment plan, change your contact information, or take other actions on your account without your knowledge
- Upfront fees: Charges of $500-$5,000 for "processing," "legal review," or "enrollment" in programs that are free to join on your own
- Fake Department of Education affiliation: Using logos, language, and phone numbers that mimic the U.S. Department of Education to appear official
Your FSA ID (the username and password you use on studentaid.gov) is the key to your entire federal student loan account. Never share it with any third-party company. No legitimate service provider needs your FSA ID login credentials. If a company asks for your FSA ID, it is a scam.
Consolidation and Refinancing Scams
How Consolidation Scams Work
Companies charge fees to "consolidate" your federal student loans, a service that is free through the Department of Education. Some trick borrowers into refinancing federal loans with private lenders, permanently stripping federal protections like income-driven repayment, forgiveness eligibility, and deferment options.
Federal Direct Consolidation Loans are free to apply for at studentaid.gov. The process takes about 30 minutes. Scam companies charge $500-$2,000 to fill out the same application on your behalf, adding no value while extracting fees from people who are already struggling financially.
Even more dangerous are companies that steer borrowers toward private refinancing without clearly explaining the consequences. When you refinance federal loans with a private lender, you permanently lose access to income-driven repayment plans, Public Service Loan Forgiveness, federal deferment and forbearance options, and any future federal forgiveness programs. For borrowers who may benefit from these protections, refinancing is a catastrophic decision -- and scam companies incentivize it because they earn commissions from the private lenders.
Debt Relief Company Fraud
How Debt Relief Scams Work
Companies promise to reduce your student loan balance through "negotiation," "settlement," or proprietary legal strategies. They charge monthly fees or a percentage of your loan balance while providing no meaningful service. Some instruct you to stop making loan payments, causing your loans to go into default -- dramatically worsening your situation.
Federal student loans cannot be "settled" or "negotiated" in the way private debts sometimes can. The Department of Education does not negotiate balances with third-party companies. Any company claiming they can reduce your federal loan balance through negotiation or settlement is lying.
The most harmful tactic used by fraudulent debt relief companies is instructing borrowers to stop making payments. They claim this is part of their "strategy" to achieve a better outcome. In reality, stopping payments causes your loans to become delinquent and eventually default, which triggers wage garnishment, tax refund seizure, credit score destruction, and loss of eligibility for future federal financial aid.
Red Flags of Debt Relief Scams
- They charge upfront fees before performing any service (this is illegal for student loan assistance companies under the FTC's Telemarketing Sales Rule)
- They guarantee a specific outcome (no company can guarantee loan forgiveness or balance reduction)
- They tell you to stop communicating with your loan servicer
- They tell you to stop making payments
- They pressure you to sign up immediately
- They claim to have a "special relationship" with the Department of Education
Student Loan Phishing Attacks
Phishing attacks targeting student loan borrowers have surged in 2026, exploiting confusion around loan servicer changes, repayment restarts, and forgiveness program updates. These attacks arrive via email, text message, and phone calls.
Common Student Loan Phishing Tactics
- Fake servicer emails: Emails impersonating MOHELA, Nelnet, Aidvantage, or other loan servicers, claiming your account requires immediate action. These emails link to phishing sites that steal your login credentials
- Fake forgiveness notifications: Emails claiming "Your student loans have been approved for forgiveness. Click here to complete your application." The link leads to a site that harvests your personal information, including SSN and banking details
- Fake Department of Education communications: Texts and emails with official-looking branding claiming to be from the DOE. The real DOE communicates through studentaid.gov and official servicer channels, not through random text messages
- Robocalls: Automated phone calls claiming to be from your servicer or a "federal student loan program," offering to lower your payments or forgive your debt if you "press 1 now"
- Log in directly to studentaid.gov or your servicer's website by typing the URL yourself
- Call your servicer using the phone number on their official website, never a number from an email or text
- The Department of Education will never ask for your FSA ID password via email or text
- If an email creates urgency ("act within 24 hours"), it is likely phishing
FAFSA and Financial Aid Scams
Scammers target students and parents during the financial aid application process, which is confusing even under the best circumstances. The Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) is free to complete, yet scam companies charge fees for "assistance" with the application.
- Paid FAFSA filing services: Companies charge $50-$300 to file the FAFSA, which is free at studentaid.gov. Some create look-alike websites (fafsa.com instead of fafsa.gov) to intercept students who misspell the URL
- Financial aid consulting scams: Companies charge thousands of dollars for "strategies" to maximize financial aid, providing generic advice available for free from school financial aid offices and official resources
- Identity theft through fake FAFSA sites: Phishing websites that mimic the FAFSA application to harvest SSNs, tax information, and banking details from students and parents
The "F" in FAFSA stands for "Free." The only legitimate website to file the FAFSA is studentaid.gov. Any site that charges money to file the FAFSA is a scam. Any site with a URL other than studentaid.gov claiming to be the FAFSA is a phishing site.
Scholarship Scams
Scholarship scams target students by offering fake financial awards that require application fees, personal information, or "processing payments" to claim.
- Application fee scholarships: Legitimate scholarships do not charge application fees. Any "scholarship" requiring payment to apply is a scam
- "You have been selected" notifications: Unsolicited emails or calls claiming you have won a scholarship you never applied for. These lead to requests for banking information "for direct deposit" or processing fees "to release the funds"
- Seminar-based scholarship scams: Free seminars that are actually high-pressure sales pitches for paid scholarship search services or overpriced college consulting
- Fake scholarship databases: Websites charging monthly fees for access to scholarship listings that are available for free on Fastweb, Scholarships.com, and through school guidance counselors
Legitimate Student Loan Help: Free Resources
- studentaid.gov -- The official U.S. Department of Education site for all federal student aid information, FAFSA filing, and loan management
- Your loan servicer's website -- Direct access to repayment plan enrollment, deferment, forbearance, and account management at no cost
- studentaid.gov/pslf -- Official Public Service Loan Forgiveness application and information
- consumerfinance.gov -- The CFPB provides free tools, complaint resolution, and educational resources about student loans
- School financial aid offices -- Your college's financial aid office provides free guidance on FAFSA, scholarships, and loan management
- National Foundation for Credit Counseling (nfcc.org) -- Free or low-cost nonprofit credit counseling including student loan guidance
How to Protect Yourself
- Never pay upfront fees for student loan assistance. Everything can be done for free through official channels
- Never share your FSA ID with any third-party company
- Verify any communication by logging directly into studentaid.gov or calling your servicer at their official number
- Be skeptical of unsolicited contact. The DOE and legitimate servicers do not cold-call offering forgiveness
- Ignore urgency and pressure. Federal programs do not have secret deadlines or limited enrollment spots
- Check companies on the Better Business Bureau, your state attorney general's website, and the CFPB complaint database before engaging
- Report scams to the FTC (reportfraud.ftc.gov), your state attorney general, and the CFPB (consumerfinance.gov/complaint)
FAQ: Student Loan Scams
Can anyone guarantee student loan forgiveness?
No. Federal student loan forgiveness is determined by specific program criteria set by the Department of Education and, in some cases, by legislation. No third-party company can guarantee forgiveness. Companies making such guarantees are violating FTC regulations and are almost certainly scams.
Should I refinance my federal student loans with a private lender?
In most cases, no. Refinancing federal loans into private loans permanently eliminates federal protections including income-driven repayment, forbearance, deferment, and forgiveness eligibility. The only scenario where refinancing may make sense is if you have a high income, strong credit, and are confident you will never need federal protections. Even then, consult a non-profit financial counselor before proceeding.
How do I know if a student loan company is legitimate?
Legitimate companies do not charge upfront fees, do not guarantee specific outcomes, do not ask for your FSA ID, and do not pressure you to act immediately. They are transparent about what they do and what it costs. However, the safest approach is to manage your loans directly through studentaid.gov and your official loan servicer, which is free.
What should I do if I have already paid a scam student loan company?
Contact your bank or credit card company immediately to dispute the charges. File a complaint with the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov, your state attorney general, and the CFPB at consumerfinance.gov/complaint. Log into studentaid.gov to check what changes (if any) were made to your account. If you shared your FSA ID, change your password immediately.
Is there any legitimate paid student loan help?
Non-profit credit counseling agencies (findable through nfcc.org) offer legitimate, affordable student loan guidance. Student loan attorneys can provide legal advice for complex situations like borrower defense claims. However, for most borrowers, the free resources at studentaid.gov and through their loan servicer are sufficient.
Protect Your Education. Protect Your Future.
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Browse Scam Database Follow @SpunkArt13"Every federal student loan program is free to access. If someone is charging you for student loan help, they are the problem, not the solution." -- @SpunkArt13