Delaware student loans CAN be discharged in bankruptcy under the "undue hardship" Brunner test, plus DOJ's 2022 guidance has made it dramatically easier. Other federal options — IDR, PSLF, forgiveness — also relevant.
Published May 8, 2026
## Student-loan discharge in bankruptcy in Delaware
Student loans were long considered virtually un-dischargeable in bankruptcy. **That's changed dramatically since 2022** — both because of new DOJ guidance and shifting court attitudes.
## The basic rule — "undue hardship"
**Bankruptcy Code § 523(a)(8):**
- Student loans NOT discharged in bankruptcy UNLESS
- Debtor proves "undue hardship" through adversary proceeding
- Adversary proceeding = mini-lawsuit within bankruptcy
- Higher burden than discharging credit-card debt
## What loans qualify as "student loans" for § 523(a)(8)?
**Definitely covered (need undue hardship):**
- Federal student loans (Direct, FFEL, Perkins, PLUS)
- Federally guaranteed loans
- Loans from non-profit institutions
- "Qualified education loans" under tax code (most private student loans for qualified education at qualified institution)
**NOT covered (dischargeable normally):**
- Loans NOT for "qualified higher education" (e.g., vocational K-12)
- Loans for non-degree programs not on Title IV list
- Loans exceeding "cost of attendance"
- Bar-exam / prep-course loans (some courts)
- Career-training loans (varies)
- Loans where debtor's school wasn't accredited / Title IV
**Many private "student" loans actually fall outside § 523(a)(8) — and are normally dischargeable.**
## The Brunner test (most courts)
**Three prongs (Brunner v. NY State Higher Ed., 1987):**
**1. Inability to maintain minimal standard of living** if forced to repay:
- Income vs essential expenses
- IRS Standards (or local) for expenses
- Modest budget required
**2. Additional circumstances** indicating future inability:
- Long-term issues (disability, age, education limits)
- Not just temporary problems
- Forward-looking analysis
**3. Good faith efforts** to repay:
- Income-driven repayment plans tried
- Forbearance / deferment when needed
- Some payment history
- No "strategic default"
**Some circuits use "totality of circumstances" test instead.**
## DOJ 2022 GUIDANCE — GAME CHANGER
**November 2022 DOJ guidance:**
- Streamlined federal student-loan discharge
- Joint DOJ/Education Department review
- Simplified attestation form
- Pre-screened cases for support
- Has dramatically increased successful discharges
**Key DOJ-supported categories:**
- Older debtors (50+) with limited prospects
- Disability-related cases
- Long-term unemployment
- Schools that closed / lost accreditation (separate ED program for this)
- Demonstrably impossible repayment
**Result:** Roughly 99% of cases where DOJ doesn't oppose result in discharge.
## Federal student-loan alternatives BEFORE bankruptcy
**1. Income-Driven Repayment (IDR):**
- SAVE plan (newest, currently in litigation)
- IBR (Income-Based Repayment)
- PAYE (Pay As You Earn)
- ICR (Income-Contingent Repayment)
- Payments based on income
- Forgiveness after 20-25 years
- IDR "$0 payment" still counts toward forgiveness
**2. Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF):**
- 10 years (120 payments) of qualifying service
- Government / 501(c)(3) employment
- Direct Loans only (consolidate other types)
- Tax-free forgiveness
- Recent expansions made many more eligible
**3. Total and Permanent Disability discharge (TPD):**
- Federal program for disabled borrowers
- VA disability rating, SSDI, or physician certification
- Tax-free discharge (CARES Act through 2025; check current law)
- Doesn't need bankruptcy
**4. Borrower Defense to Repayment:**
- For students of fraudulent / closed schools
- Federal Student Aid program
- Discharges loans from misrepresentation
**5. Closed-School Discharge:**
- School closed during enrollment / shortly after
- Federal program (not bankruptcy)
- Recent expansions
**6. Death / Disability Discharge:**
- Federal loans only
- Discharge if borrower dies / becomes permanently disabled
## Private student loans — different rules
**Private loans are NOT eligible for federal programs:**
- No IDR / PSLF / TPD discharge
- Bankruptcy + lawsuit are main options
- Statute of limitations CAN run (federal loans have NO SOL)
- Defaulted private loans may be assigned to collectors
**Private loan bankruptcy issues:**
- Many actually outside § 523(a)(8)
- Need to determine if "qualified education loan"
- Standard discharge analysis if not qualified
## Adversary proceeding process
**1. File main bankruptcy** (Chapter 7 or 13)
**2. File adversary proceeding** specifically for student-loan discharge
**3. Discovery + evidence gathering**
**4. DOJ review** (federal loans) per 2022 guidance
**5. Settlement / trial / decision**
**6. Discharge order** (if successful)
## Strategy with student loans + bankruptcy
**Chapter 7 + adversary:**
- Discharge other debts
- Adversary for student loans
- Most cost-effective if approved
**Chapter 13 + adversary:**
- 3-5 year plan with manageable payments
- Pay students loans pro-rata with other unsecured
- File adversary at end / during
- Some courts more amenable in Chapter 13
**Income-driven first:**
- Sometimes IDR + PSLF / forgiveness adequate
- Less drastic than bankruptcy
- Adversary as backup if IDR doesn't help
## Common factors courts consider
- Age + work history
- Education + earning potential
- Health / disability
- Family obligations
- Income trajectory
- Reasonable expenses
- Loan amount + interest
- Repayment effort
- Job market in field
## Recent trends
**More discharges granted:**
- DOJ 2022 guidance
- Courts moving away from harsh Brunner application
- Recognition of unrealistic standards
- Higher discharge rates in 2023-2025
**But still:**
- Adversary proceedings cost money + effort
- Many borrowers don't pursue
- Most successful cases have specific facts
- Loan size matters less than ability to pay
## Tax implications
**Generally:**
- Discharged debt = taxable income (1099-C)
- BUT student-loan discharge tax-FREE through 2025 (American Rescue Plan)
- Insolvency exception generally available
- Bankruptcy exception generally available
- Always check current law
## What you should do
If you're a Delaware resident overwhelmed by student loans: first explore federal options (IDR / PSLF / TPD / borrower defense). If federal options inadequate, consult a bankruptcy attorney with student-loan experience. The 2022 DOJ guidance has made discharge much more achievable than 5 years ago. Many Delaware bankruptcy attorneys now actively pursue student-loan adversary proceedings.
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*This guide is general information about federal bankruptcy + student-loan law as of mid-2026 and is not legal advice. Student-loan discharge is technical + evolving. Talk to a licensed Delaware bankruptcy attorney about your specific case.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.