Quick Answer
Administrative forbearance is a temporary pause on federal student loan payments that your loan servicer or the government places on your account automatically — no application needed. It’s used during processing delays, policy transitions, billing errors, or federal emergencies. Interest usually still accrues during this period, which means your loan balance can quietly grow even though you’re not making payments.
Administrative forbearance is automatically applied — you don’t request it; your servicer does it.
Common triggers: processing delays, PSLF review, loan transfers, federal disaster declarations, and billing errors.
Interest accrues on most loan types during administrative forbearance — your balance grows silently.
It does not typically hurt your credit score, but it can increase your total repayment cost if interest capitalizes.
It’s not the same as deferment or income-driven repayment — and it’s not always in your best financial interest.
You can sometimes exit administrative forbearance early by contacting your servicer — but know the tradeoffs first.
Servicer errors are real: millions of borrowers have been auto-placed in forbearance for years without realizing the cost.
If you’ve ever logged into your loan servicer’s portal and noticed your payment status changed without warning — or received a letter saying your account is in ‘forbearance’ when you never asked for it — you’ve likely experienced administrative forbearance firsthand.
So what is it, exactly?
Administrative forbearance is a federally authorized, servicer-initiated pause on student loan payments. Unlike standard forbearance (which you request), administrative forbearance is applied automatically by your loan servicer or the Department of Education. You don’t fill out a form. It just happens.
The legal authority for administrative forbearance comes from the Higher Education Act. Under 34 CFR 685.205, loan servicers are permitted — and sometimes required — to place borrowers in forbearance when there are processing delays, billing errors, or administrative transitions that make it impossible to maintain normal repayment.
‘Automatic‘ doesn’t mean ‘free.’ Interest keeps building on most federal loan types during administrative forbearance, and that interest can capitalize (get added to your principal) when the forbearance ends. That’s how some borrowers end up owing more than they originally borrowed.
Think of administrative forbearance like a mandatory timeout — one the school calls, not you. Here’s the basic flow:
Loan transfer, PSLF processing, disaster declaration, billing error, etc.
Sometimes without telling you immediately.
Temporarily zero or reduced.
On unsubsidized loans (and subsidized loans after any grace period ends).
Payments resume at normal schedule.
It’s added to your principal balance — and then starts earning interest too.
If you have $40,000 in loans at 6% interest, you’re accruing roughly $200/month in interest. Three months of administrative forbearance = $600 added to your balance — and that $600 then starts earning interest too. This is where most borrowers are surprised to find their balance higher than when they started.
Administrative forbearance isn’t rare. You’ll likely encounter it at least once during your student loan repayment journey. Here are the most common triggers:
Loan Servicing Transfers
When the government shifts your account from one servicer to another (which happened repeatedly since 2021 with FedLoan, Navient, and Great Lakes exiting), the transition period often results in temporary forbearance. Millions of borrowers were placed in forbearance during mass servicer transitions of 2021–2023 — often without proactive notification.
PSLF and Forgiveness Processing
If you’ve applied for Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) or another forgiveness program, your account may be placed in administrative forbearance while your application is being reviewed. But if the review takes months, the interest clock is still running.
Federal Emergency Declarations
Natural disasters, pandemics, and national emergencies can trigger broad administrative forbearance. The COVID-19 payment pause (2020–2023) was the most famous example — though that pause was interest-free, which is unusual. Typical emergency forbearance still accrues interest.
Billing Errors and System Glitches
If your servicer makes a billing mistake — wrong payment amount, incorrect account setup, or system error — they may place you in forbearance while they fix it. You didn’t ask for it. The error wasn’t yours. But you’re still accruing interest.
Consolidation or Rehabilitation
When you’re consolidating loans or rehabilitating a defaulted loan, your account may go into administrative forbearance during the processing window. This can take 60–90 days, sometimes longer.
Short-Term Discrepancies
Sometimes the forbearance is tiny — just a few days when your payment processing system has a hiccup. But even short-term forbearance adds up over time if it becomes a pattern.
The Pros
No missed payment penalties — Account stays in good standing even though payments are paused.
No credit score impact — Properly applied forbearance is not reported negatively to credit bureaus.
Breathing room — No need to scramble to make payments during transitions or error resolutions.
Automatic — Nothing to fill out. Nothing to prove. It just gets applied.
The Cons
Interest keeps accruing — On unsubsidized Direct Loans, PLUS loans, and other non-subsidized loans, interest builds daily.
Capitalization risk — Accumulated interest may be added to your principal, increasing the total owed.
No IDR progress — Forbearance months generally do not count toward IDR forgiveness timelines.
Can mask larger problems — Servicers may use forbearance to avoid addressing deeper issues like misapplied payments.
You may not be notified — Many borrowers discover forbearance only when they log in or get a statement.
Most people confuse these two. Here’s a clean side-by-side so you know exactly what you’re dealing with:
| Feature | Administrative Forbearance | General Forbearance |
|---|---|---|
| Who initiates it? | Loan servicer or federal government | Borrower (you request it) |
| Interest accrues? | Yes — on most loan types | Yes — always accrues |
| Application required? | No — placed automatically | Yes — must apply |
| Common situations | Processing errors, policy changes, disasters, PSLF review | Financial hardship, medical issues, employment gaps |
| Duration | Short-term; typically 60–90 days at a time | Up to 12 months (36 months lifetime) |
| Capitalization risk? | Yes — interest can capitalize afterward | Yes — always a risk |
| Best for… | Temporary limbo while issues are resolved | When you need an intentional payment pause |
| Credit impact | Generally none if handled correctly | Generally none, but check servicer policy |
WARNING
This is the section you won’t find in the average student loan article. Let’s talk about the things no one is telling you.
If you’re on an income-driven repayment plan (like SAVE, PAYE, or IBR) and working toward the 20- or 25-year forgiveness window, administrative forbearance months typically do not count toward that timeline. The CFPB has warned repeatedly that overuse of forbearance — even when placed automatically — can cost borrowers years of progress toward forgiveness.
A 2022 investigation by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau found that several loan servicers were placing borrowers in forbearance instead of enrolling them in IDR plans — even when the borrower asked about lower payment options. Why? Because forbearance is easier for servicers to process. The cost is borne entirely by the borrower through interest growth.
Here’s a real scenario: You have $55,000 in unsubsidized loans at 6.54% interest. You’re placed in administrative forbearance for 6 months during a PSLF review. During that time, roughly $1,800 in interest builds up. When forbearance ends and that interest capitalizes, your new principal is $56,800 — and now you’re paying 6.54% on that higher number every year going forward.
The longer the forbearance, the worse this gets. And if it happens multiple times throughout your repayment? It compounds quietly into thousands of extra dollars owed.
Federal rules require servicers to notify borrowers when they’re placed in administrative forbearance. But ‘notify’ can mean a letter sent to an old address, an email that lands in spam, or an in-portal message you never saw. Don’t assume silence means nothing has changed — log into your servicer account regularly and review your payment status.
If you’re pursuing PSLF, every month matters. Months spent in administrative forbearance do not count as qualifying payments — even if you made a payment by mistake during that period. You’d need to request that the servicer apply the payment correctly and count it toward your 120 required payments.
Sarah has been a public school teacher for 9 years and has been making qualifying PSLF payments the whole time. She submits her final employment certification and waits for confirmation that her loans will be forgiven. Her servicer places her account in administrative forbearance during the review — which takes 4 months.
During those 4 months, Sarah’s unsubsidized loans accrue $780 in interest. When forbearance ends and forgiveness is confirmed, that $780 disappears — because her loans are forgiven. But if PSLF were denied? That $780 would capitalize, and she’d start over from a higher balance.
If you’re very close to forgiveness, administrative forbearance is usually fine. If you’re not — or if the review could be denied — that accruing interest is real money you’ll owe.
Mike had been on an IBR plan with FedLoan Servicing for years. When his loans were transferred to MOHELA in 2022, he was placed in administrative forbearance for 3 months during the transition. He didn’t realize it until his balance was $1,200 higher than he expected.
He called MOHELA, confirmed what happened, and asked if any of those months could be counted toward his IDR forgiveness. They couldn’t. He also found that one of his payments before the transfer had been misapplied — something he only discovered because he asked.
Always audit your payment history after a loan transfer. Errors are common, and servicers aren’t always proactive about fixing them.
Emily called her servicer to ask about lowering her monthly payment. She was struggling financially after a medical leave from work. Instead of walking her through IDR options — which could have dropped her payment to $0 based on her income — the servicer agent suggested forbearance as a ‘quick solution.’
Three months later, Emily’s balance had grown by $900 in accrued interest. She later discovered she qualified for $0/month IDR payments the entire time. Those IDR months would have counted toward her forgiveness timeline; the forbearance months did not.
Know your rights. Always ask whether IDR or deferment is an option before accepting forbearance.
Let’s get specific about how the math works, because this is where the real damage happens.
Direct Unsubsidized Loans: Always accrue interest during forbearance.
Direct Subsidized Loans: Typically accrue interest during forbearance (unlike deferment, where the government covers interest).
Direct PLUS Loans (Parent and Grad): Always accrue interest during forbearance.
Direct Consolidation Loans: Accrue interest based on the weighted average of the loans that were consolidated.
Capitalization is when your accrued, unpaid interest gets added to your principal loan balance. This means you’re now paying interest on a higher number — and because student loan interest is calculated daily, the difference compounds over time.
Important note (2023 update): Under the SAVE plan, the government implemented protections against interest capitalization in certain circumstances. However, depending on the legal status of SAVE when you read this — it has faced ongoing court challenges — these protections may or may not be in effect. Always check StudentAid.gov for the latest rules.
Example: The True Cost of 6 Months of Forbearance
$45,000
6.54%
~$8.06
~$1,451
You may not be able to prevent administrative forbearance — but you can absolutely minimize its impact.
Make voluntary interest payments during forbearance. Even if your required payment is $0, you can still pay down the accruing interest. This prevents capitalization.
Contact your servicer immediately. Ask why you were placed in forbearance, how long it will last, and whether there’s a better alternative.
Ask about interest subsidy programs. For some borrowers in specific forbearance types, the government may cover interest. Confirm whether this applies to you.
Request IDR as an alternative. If financial hardship is involved, ask specifically about SAVE, PAYE, or IBR. IDR payments count toward forgiveness; forbearance months don’t.
Keep records of every conversation. Document servicer contacts, names, dates, and what was said. If something goes wrong, you’ll have evidence.
Set calendar reminders to check your balance monthly. Don’t let forbearance sneak up on you.
Depending on your situation, one of these may serve you far better:
Income-Driven Repayment (IDR)
IDR plans like SAVE, PAYE, and IBR cap your monthly payment at a percentage of your discretionary income. If your income is low, your payment could be $0 — and those months still count toward your forgiveness timeline. This is almost always better than forbearance for financially struggling borrowers.
Deferment
Deferment pauses payments like forbearance — but on subsidized loans, the government pays the interest during deferment. That’s a significant advantage. You may qualify if you’re in school, unemployed, experiencing economic hardship, or serving in the military. Check eligibility at StudentAid.gov.
Extended Repayment Plans
If your payments are simply too high, an extended repayment plan stretches your loan over 25 years, reducing the monthly amount. You’ll pay more interest overall — but at least each payment counts and you maintain control. This pairs well with our guide on how loan terms affect your monthly payments.
Loan Refinancing (With Caution)
Refinancing through a private lender can lower your interest rate — but you permanently lose access to federal IDR plans, PSLF, and income-based forgiveness. Only consider this if you’re absolutely certain you won’t need those programs. Tools like Credible and LendKey let you compare rates without a hard credit pull.
Log into your servicer portal or call them. Ask specifically: “Am I in administrative forbearance? Who initiated it and why?”
Ask how long the forbearance is expected to last and when normal payments will resume.
For most loan types, it is. Ask whether interest will capitalize when forbearance ends.
Even $50–$100/month toward interest prevents capitalization and saves you money long-term.
Ask your servicer: “Would IDR or deferment be more appropriate for my situation?” If they push back, you have the right to request a supervisor or file a complaint with the FSA Ombudsman.
Request an updated qualifying payment count if you’re pursuing forgiveness.
Use your servicer’s portal or download the StudentAid.gov app to track changes in real time.
Report servicer errors to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) and the Federal Student Aid Feedback Center. Both take complaints seriously.
Assuming forbearance is always interest-free. Only in rare federally mandated situations (like the COVID pause) was interest waived. Usually, it accrues.
Not checking their balance during forbearance. Months pass, interest grows, and the shock hits at the end.
Accepting the servicer’s first suggestion. If a representative mentions forbearance during a hardship call, always ask: “What about IDR or deferment?”
Missing the window to make voluntary payments. You can usually still pay during forbearance — use that to prevent capitalization.
Not documenting servicer calls. If a servicer makes an error, your only recourse is evidence of what was promised.
Forgetting to re-enroll in autopay. After forbearance ends, some servicers require you to re-authorize automatic payments. Miss this and you could get a late fee or credit hit.
One of the most frustrating things about student loan forbearance is how often the rules change. Since 2020 alone, borrowers have navigated:
End of payment pause and transition chaos
Mass servicer transfers
SAVE plan rollout and legal challenges
PSLF waiver program changes
Each of these events triggered waves of administrative forbearance — and many borrowers didn’t know what status their account was in, what counted toward forgiveness, or when payments would resume.
The best defense is staying informed. Bookmark StudentAid.gov and subscribe to your servicer’s email updates. The National Consumer Law Center also tracks policy changes and publishes plain-language guidance for borrowers.
Administrative forbearance generally doesn’t hurt your credit — but ‘generally’ isn’t ‘guaranteed.’ Here’s what to watch for:
Some servicers have incorrectly reported forbearance periods as delinquencies. Check your credit report at AnnualCreditReport.com quarterly.
Checking your own credit never affects your score. Use it regularly. Learn more about checking your credit score for free.
Apps like Credit Karma or Experian give you free access to your score and alert you if something changes unexpectedly during a forbearance period.
Administrative forbearance isn’t inherently bad — sometimes it’s exactly the right tool for the situation. But the problem is that most borrowers accept it passively, without understanding what it’s costing them in accruing interest, delayed forgiveness progress, and potential capitalization.
If you’re in administrative forbearance right now, don’t wait to act. Log into your servicer account, find out exactly why you’re in forbearance and for how long, and ask whether there’s a better alternative for your situation.
If you’re struggling financially, IDR plans almost always serve you better than forbearance. If you’re pursuing PSLF, every month matters — and forbearance months don’t count. If you’re simply in a transitional period (loan transfer, processing delay), it may be fine to stay put — just make those voluntary interest payments if you can.
Student loans are one of the biggest financial commitments most Americans make. Don’t let a passive, automatic status change quietly add thousands to your balance. Stay informed, stay proactive, and know that you have options.
If you’re unsure what to do next, reach out to a certified student loan counselor through the NFCC (National Foundation for Credit Counseling) or check the FSA Feedback Center for help navigating servicer issues. You don’t have to figure this out alone.
Finance Navigator Pro | This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or legal advice. Always consult a qualified professional for guidance specific to your situation.



