Learn how student loan servicers work and how the Department of Education’s (DOE) changes to the process will affect you and your federal student loans.

Definition and Examples of Student Loan Servicers 

A student loan servicer is a company that the Department of Education uses to handle repayment, billing, and other aspects of your federal student loans. The DOE assigns each borrower to a servicer once the borrower’s loan is disbursed.  There are currently several different federal loan servicers:

FedLoan ServicingGreat Lakes Educational Loan Services, Inc.HESC/EdfinancialMissouri Higher Education Loan Authority (MOHELA)AidvantageNelnetOLSA ServicingECSI

To service loans that have gone into default, the DOE uses Default Resolution Group.

How Do Student Loan Servicers Work? 

A student loan servicer manages details big and small related to your federal student loans. Because federal loans are complex products with a variety of repayment options, monthly payment amounts, and loan-forgiveness criteria, a servicer performs many tasks throughout the life of a federal student loan. Tasks include: 

Tracking student loans that borrowers have received  Answering borrower questions and providing customer service Collecting payments  Maintaining records of borrowed funds and repayment progress  Processing requests for changes to repayment plans  Processing requests for deferment or forbearance  Working with borrowers on options to avoid default Providing 1098-E tax forms if you paid at least $600 in student loan interest during the year

Under the current system, the DOE assigns a loan to a servicer, which then contacts the borrower to begin the loan administration process. Borrowers may also contact the Federal Student Aid Information Center (FSAIC) at 1-800-433-3243 to find out who their servicer is. Servicers can be reassigned at any time, and one borrower may have multiple servicers. If your federal student loans are transferred from one servicer to another, your loans will still be owed.

How Are Loan Servicers Paid?

Borrowers do not pay fees to servicers directly. Instead, the DOE pays loan servicers based on the terms of contracts—the specifics of which have not been disclosed.  The Department of Education spent $883 million for student loan administration in 2020, and was expected to pay more than a billion in 2021. However, the transition to Next Gen—the DOE’s initiative to streamline the servicing process—is expected to result in reduced outlays on loan servicing. The DOE was able to cut its 2020 loan servicing budget by nearly $300 million as a result of the Next Gen program. 

Changes to Student Loan Servicing

In June 2020, the DOE announced it would overhaul its loan servicing program to streamline the servicing process—a plan that initially launched in 2017. Known as the Next Gen project (short for Next Gen Business Process Operations), the DOE is implementing the following changes under the program:

There will be one website through which borrowers access their servicer account, rather than separate websites for each servicer New contracts with servicers will incentivize successful account management and provide consequences for unmet contractual requirements Contracts with five new loan servicers Contracts for Granite State and Navient continued through December 2021 Contracts for Great Lakes, Nelnet, HESC/Edfinancial, MOHELA, and OSLA Servicing will be extended through December 2023 Contracts for FedLoan Servicing will be extended through December 2022

The five servicers participating in the new student-loan servicing platform will be: 

Edfinancial Services LLCF.H. Cann & Associates LLCMAXIMUS Federal Services Inc.MOHELATexas Guaranteed Student Loan Corporation (Trellis Company)

The DOE will phase in these new servicers over time, with contracts for existing servicers extended enough to provide time for the transition. After the transition, borrowers will experience more streamlined service. They’ll be able to call just one number to connect with their servicer, and servicers will be trained to handle student loans, FAFSA questions, grants, and other aspects of borrowing beyond loans.