Borrowers searching online for “charities that pay off student loans” mostly find debt-relief operators charging fees, not nonprofits cutting checks. Real options exist, but they’re narrower (and slower) than most borrowers expect.
By The Numbers
The most prominent debt-cancellation nonprofit, the Debt Collective, has used its Rolling Jubilee Fund to abolish more than $32 million in medical, student, payday, and probation debt over its history.
Notable student debt wins from the Debt Collective and Rolling Jubilee:
- $9.7 million in Morehouse College student account balances purchased for roughly $125,000 in 2023
- $1.7 million in Bennett College debt cancelled for 462 former students
The Slowdown: Large-scale buy-and-cancel actions on student debt have stalled. The Debt Collective hasn’t announced a major student debt portfolio purchase in the last couple of years, shifting most of its energy into federal student loan forgiveness advocacy, organizing, and debt strikes.
There is no application portal where individual borrowers can request relief. Cancellation campaigns target institutional debt portfolios (usually tied to a specific school or debt type) not borrower-by-borrower aid.
Where To Get Actual Student Loan Relief
Three real channels still move money against borrower balances:
Federal Forgiveness Programs
Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF), Teacher Loan Forgiveness, Income-Driven Repayment forgiveness, Total and Permanent Disability discharge, and Borrower Defense remain the largest sources of cancelled student debt by dollar volume.
State Loan Repayment Assistance
State LRAPs target healthcare workers, teachers, lawyers in legal aid, and STEM roles in high-need areas. The National Health Service Corps and NURSE Corps are the largest federal-state hybrid programs.
Employer Student Loan Repayment Assistance
Employers can pay up to $5,250 per employee per year toward student loans on a tax-free basis. SECURE 2.0 also lets employers match an employee’s student loan payments with 401(k) contributions — meaning the employee gets retirement savings without diverting cash from their loan payment.
How This Connects
The College Investor maintains a running list of companies offering student loan repayment assistance, which is the most realistic “someone else helps pay my loans” path for the average borrower. Hundreds of employers (from Aetna and Fidelity to Google and Estée Lauder) offer some form of student loan repayment assistance today.
We’ve also covered nonprofit student loan forgiveness, which is forgiveness available through working at a 501(c)(3) — not charities writing off your balance.
If a website promises a charity will pay off your loans for an upfront fee, walk away. The CFPB and FTC have brought repeated enforcement actions against operators using “forgiveness charity” branding to collect fees and stop borrower payments.
The legitimate path remains employer benefits, federal and state programs, and (for a small share of borrowers) institutional debt cancellation campaigns that have largely gone quiet on student debt for now.
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Editor: Colin Graves
The post Are There Charities That Pay Off Student Loans? Here’s What’s Real In 2026 appeared first on The College Investor.
