Private Student Loan Disability Discharge: What’s Possible (and What Isn’t)
Private student loans do not follow federal disability discharge rules. Learn how lender policies work and when discharge is possible.
Private student loans do not have a guaranteed disability discharge the way federal student loans do.
There is no single disability discharge program for private loans. There is no standardized eligibility test. There is no guaranteed outcome.
Any disability-based relief depends entirely on the loan contract or the lender’s internal policies. That distinction determines whether any relief exists at all.
Does TPDTotal and Permanent Disability Discharge (TPD)A federal loan discharge for borrowers who are totally and permanently disabled, as documented by the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Social Security Administration, or a physician's certification. Discharge Apply to Private Student Loans?
Federal Total and Permanent Disability (TPD) discharge applies only to federal student loans. Private student loans are not eligible for TPD discharge, even if the borrower qualifies for VA or Social Security disability benefits. Any disability-related relief on private loans depends entirely on the loan contract or lender policy.
Why Federal Disability Forgiveness Does Not Apply to Private Student Loans
Federal Total and Permanent Disability discharge is a statutory program created by Congress and administered by the U.S. Department of EducationU.S. Department of Education (ED)The federal agency that oversees federal student aid programs, issues regulations for federal student loans, and is the ultimate lender on Direct Loans.. By design, it applies only to federal student loans.
Private student loans operate under contract law, not federal disability statutes. That difference controls everything: there is no automatic right to discharge, no standardized eligibility test, and no government-run application process for private loans. Any disability-related relief depends entirely on the terms of the promissory notePromissory NoteThe legal contract a borrower signs to receive a loan. It sets out the amount borrowed, the interest rate, repayment terms, and the borrower's obligations to the lender. or a lender’s voluntary policy.
Because of this separation, qualifying for Social Security Disability or VA disability benefits does not, by itself, trigger relief on a private student loanPrivate Student LoanA student loan issued by a bank, credit union, or other private lender rather than the federal government. Private loans generally lack federal protections like income-driven repayment and broad forgiveness programs.. Private lenders are not bound by federal TPD rules and are not required to mirror federal outcomes.
Related: Who Qualifies for Disability-Based Student Loan Forgiveness
Where Disability Relief Can Exist for Private Student Loans
Disability-based relief for private student loans can exist, but only through limited channels. There is no single rule that applies across lenders.
First, the loan contract. Some private loan agreements include disability discharge or cancellation clauses. These provisions vary by lender and loan vintage. Some require total and permanent disability. Others require strict medical certification. Many provide no disability relief at all.
Second, lender hardship or disability programs. Some lenders offer voluntary programs outside the contract. These programs are not legally guaranteed and can change at any time. Relief may include temporary payment suspension, modified terms, or—in limited cases—partial or full discharge.
What Private Lenders Typically Require to Consider Disability Relief
Private lenders usually require medical documentation showing how the borrower’s condition affects the ability to work.
This often includes certification from a physician or other licensed medical professional. Some lenders also require language addressing whether the impairment is permanent or long-term.
Even when documentation resembles what would qualify for federal disability discharge, the standard is different. The lender decides whether the documentation meets its contractual criteria.
What Private Disability Programs Do Not Do
Private disability programs rarely cancel the debt permanently or end lender control.
Approval is discretionary. Lenders are not required to approve relief, offer alternatives, or follow a standardized timeline or appeal process.
When relief is granted, it is usually temporary. Common outcomes include payment pauses, reduced payments, or interest-only terms. Lenders may later reassess disability and withdraw relief.
Disability relief also does not reliably release co-signers. In many contracts, relief applies only to the individual whose disability is evaluated, leaving the other party fully liable.
Related: When a TPD Discharge Is Final
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FAQs
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Yes. Many lenders reserve the right to request updated documentation or reevaluate disability status over time. Unlike federal TPD discharge, private disability relief may not be final.
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No. Disability relief is often borrower-specific. A disabled primary borrower may receive relief while the co-signer remains liable, or a disabled co-signer may be released while the primary borrower remains responsible.
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No. There is no standardized disability application process for private loans. Each lender sets its own rules, documentation requirements, and review procedures.
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