Current:Home > InvestEchoSense:Most student loan borrowers have delayed major life events due to debt, recent poll says -AssetLink
EchoSense:Most student loan borrowers have delayed major life events due to debt, recent poll says
Ethermac View
Date:2025-04-10 05:11:41
Student loan debt has caused most borrowers to put off major life events such as buying a home or EchoSensegetting married, a recent study found.
According to the Lumina Foundation-Gallup 2024 State of Higher Education study, which was released Wednesday, 71% of all currently enrolled college students or previously enrolled students who stopped out of their program before completing it say they have delayed at least one major life event because of their student loans.
The study found that among previously enrolled students, 35% say their loans have kept them from re-enrolling in a postsecondary program and finishing their degree.
Graphic explainer:How are college costs adding up these days and how much has tuition risen?
Purchasing a home tops list of delayed events
Purchasing a home is the most commonly delayed event, named by 29% of borrowers, while buying a car, moving out of their parents' home and starting their own business followed closely behind. Fifteen percent of those borrowers also report they have delayed having children because of student loans and another 13% have delayed getting married, the study found.
Learn more: Best personal loans
Demographics of those delaying life events
According to the study, male borrowers are slightly more likely than female borrowers (76% vs. 64%, respectively) to report they have delayed a major life event due to loans.
Delay rates are also slightly higher for 26- to 35-year-old borrowers (77%), "likely because they have entered a life stage in which these events are more relevant than for younger borrowers and because they generally have higher amounts of student loans than their older peers," the study found.
The amount of student loan debt is also a factor in the delaying of major life events. The study found that "borrowers with higher amounts of student loan debt are far more likely than those borrowing lesser amounts to say they have delayed purchasing a home, buying a car, moving out of their parents' home or another major life event."
More than nine in 10 of those who have borrowed at least $60,000 in student loans say they have delayed one or more major life event, according to the study.
However, even relatively modest student loan amounts were found to have an impact, as 63% of those who have borrowed less than $10,000 say they have delayed major live events.
How the study was conducted
The study was conducted from Oct. 9 to Nov. 16, 2023, via a web survey with over 14,000 current and prospective college students. Included among those were over 6,000 students enrolled in a post-high school education program, over 5,000 adults not currently enrolled with some college but no degree, and over 3,000 adults who had never been enrolled in a postsecondary school or program.
Student loan relief:Biden announced $7.4 billion in student loan relief. Here's how that looks in your state
President Biden announced $7.4 billion in student loan relief last week
President Joe Biden announced another batch of student loan forgiveness last Friday for 277,000 borrowers. The canceled debt adds up to $7.4 billion.
Most of those borrowers signed up for the president’s signature income-driven repayment plan – Saving on a Valuable Education, or SAVE. Through SAVE, people who originally borrowed a small amount ($12,000 or less) and have been paying it off for at least a decade are eligible for relief.
Others affected are 65,700 borrowers participating through other income-driven plans who should have qualified for relief but did not because their loan servicers wrongfully put them into forbearance. Fixes to those plans account for nearly half of the loans forgiven in the announcement Friday.
The final bucket includes a few thousand borrowers participating in Public Service Loan Forgiveness, which relieves the loans for people working in government jobs or positions that give back to the community. Biden has been working to fix various administrative problems that have long plagued the program, and the discharges announced Friday are the result of one such adjustment.
The latest batch of student loan debt relief brings the total amount forgiven under Biden to $153 billion. In all, the administration says nearly 4.3 million Americans have had their student loans relieved thanks to its actions. That works out to about 1 in 10 federal borrowers who’ve been approved for relief.
Contributing: Alia Wong & Zachary Schermele, USA TODAY
Gabe Hauari is a national trending news reporter at USA TODAY. You can follow him on X @GabeHauari or email him at [email protected].
veryGood! (3)
Related
- USA men's volleyball mourns chance at gold after losing 5-set thriller, will go for bronze
- Bahrain rights group says 13 convicted over prison sit-in that authorities say was violent
- Oregon Gov. Kotek directs state police to crack down on fentanyl distribution
- Lebanese military court sentences an Islamic State group official to 160 years in prison
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- A judge found Trump committed fraud in building his real-estate empire. Here’s what happens next
- Crucial for a Clean Energy Economy, the Aluminum Industry’s Carbon Footprint Is Enormous
- CVS responds quickly after pharmacists frustrated with their workload miss work
- New Orleans mayor’s former bodyguard making first court appearance after July indictment
- A professor quietly resigned after 'falsifying grades'. Then she went to teach at another Wisconsin campus.
Ranking
- Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
- Canadian police won’t investigate doctor for sterilizing Indigenous woman
- Bruce Springsteen Postpones All 2023 Tour Dates Amid Health Battle
- Former Spain women’s national team coach Jorge Vilda added to probe into Rubiales’ kissing a player
- 2024 Olympics: Gymnast Ana Barbosu Taking Social Media Break After Scoring Controversy
- Anderson Cooper Details His Late Mom's Bats--t Crazy Idea to Be His Surrogate
- Over 50,000 Armenians flee enclave as exodus accelerates
- Travis Kelce shouts out Taylor Swift on his podcast for 'seeing me rock the stage'
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
'Home Town' star Erin Napier shares shirtless photo of Ben Napier, cheering on his fitness journey
Powerball jackpot up to $850 million after months without a big winner
More than 100 dead, over 200 injured in fire at Iraq wedding party
'Meet me at the gate': Watch as widow scatters husband's ashes, BASE jumps into canyon
Michigan fake elector defendants want case dropped due to attorney general’s comments
House advances GOP-backed spending bills, but threat of government shutdown remains
In a win for Black voters in redistricting case, Alabama to get new congressional lines