Bankruptcy · WA

Student-Loan Discharge in Bankruptcy in Washington

Washington 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 Washington 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 Washington 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 Washington bankruptcy attorneys now actively pursue student-loan adversary proceedings. --- *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 Washington 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.