The Trump administration has announced a major restructuring of the federal student loan system, transferring management of defaulted student loans from the U.S. Department of Education to the Treasury Department in what supporters describe as a long-overdue effort to improve accountability, strengthen collections and reduce bureaucratic inefficiency.
Under the new agreement unveiled Thursday, the Treasury Department will assume responsibility for loans already in default, a massive portfolio that officials say is better suited to an agency built to handle large-scale financial management and debt collection.
The transfer marks the first phase of a broader reorganization that could eventually place all federal student loans under Treasury oversight. The agreement outlines a later phase in which Treasury would assume operational responsibility over non-defaulted loans as well, signaling a major shift away from the Education Department’s decades-long control of the program.
Administration officials cast the move as a practical response to years of mismanagement and borrower distress. Supporters argue that putting defaulted debt under Treasury is a more logical fit, given the department’s experience handling federal payments, collections and large financial systems.
The timing underscores the scale of the problem. Education Department data released this month showed about 9.2 million Americans are in default on student loans, highlighting the enormous backlog facing the federal government.
Backers of the move say the change could create a more centralized and disciplined process for dealing with seriously delinquent debt while reducing duplication between agencies. They also view it as a step toward streamlining the federal government and shrinking the role of the Education Department, in line with President Donald Trump’s broader effort to dismantle the agency.
For borrowers whose loans are not in default, immediate changes are not expected right away. But the agreement makes clear that the long-term plan is far more sweeping, with Treasury positioned to take on a larger role across the entire federal student loan system.
The move represents one of the most significant changes to federal student loan administration in more than 40 years. Supporters say it is a needed course correction that places loan oversight in the hands of an agency better equipped to manage financial operations at scale while helping restore order to a system that has grown increasingly unwieldy.



