Federal student loan borrowers are reporting that their parents’ Parent PLUS Loans (including loans already forgiven) are now showing up under their personal accounts on StudentAid.gov following a system update over the weekend of April 25-26, 2026.
The reports, surfacing on Reddit and TikTok, point to a possible database error tying parental loans to the children they were borrowed for, rather than to the parent borrowers who legally owe them. One borrower showed The College Investor team a Parent PLUS that was already forgiven for the parent, now showing up in their own account.
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Why it matters: Parent PLUS Loans are the legal obligation of the parent who took them out, not the student who’s education they paid for. If the loans now appear under the student’s StudentAid account, it could:
- Inflate a borrower’s total federal loan balance
- Wrongly flag a borrower as being in default
- Create complications for Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) and other repayment plans
- Trigger collection activity against the wrong person
While some of these take time to happen (such as collections), depending on how much automation has been built into the system, it could create a slippery slope.
State of play: Borrowers are sharing similar accounts across multiple platforms.
A Reddit user reported that their mother’s Parent PLUS loans are showing up, after they were forgiven since she passed away. The user submitted a death certificate to Aidvantage and the discharge was being processed. Within the past week, those Parent PLUS Loans appeared in the “My Loans” section of the user’s own StudentAid account. According to the post, both StudentAid and Aidvantage representatives told the user this was “normal” — even though the user was never previously listed as a borrower on those loans.
Another borrower with 10-plus years of qualifying PSLF employment said two of their consolidated loans recently received green PSLF tracking banners. After the weekend FSA update, a defaulted Parent PLUS Loan taken out by an estranged parent appeared on the borrower’s account, increasing the total balance and flagging the account as in default.
FSA added my parent’s defaulted parent plus loan to my account after 15 years
by
u/boopieshaboopie in
PSLF
What officials are saying: As of Monday, the U.S. Department of Education and Federal Student Aid (FSA) have not issued a public statement about the reports.
Is this a privacy violation? Possibly. The Privacy Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C. § 552a) requires federal agencies (including the Department of Education and FSA) to keep records accurate and to avoid disclosing one person’s records to another without consent. Showing a parent’s loan inside the child’s StudentAid account could be an unauthorized disclosure of records. If inaccurate default data flows to the credit bureaus, the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) could also come into play.
But this is not a path to loan forgiveness. A glitch from a weekend system update is not a basis to demand cancellation of legitimate federal student loan debt. Privacy Act claims require the violation to be “intentional or willful” — a high bar that a quickly-patched bug typically does not meet.
Borrowers also have to show actual damages, and most who simply saw a misattributed loan briefly appear in their account (without credit reporting impact, denied benefits, or out-of-pocket loss) likely have no quantifiable harm to recover.
The realistic remedies are administrative: fix the record with FSA, dispute any inaccurate credit reporting, and file complaints with the FSA Ombudsman or CFPB. Class action lawsuits could be filed if the misreporting persists after notice, but individual borrowers should not expect anything from this glitch.
How this connects: More than 3.7 million parents owe $112 billion in Parent PLUS loans, according to the latest student loan statistics.
The timing of these reports, immediately following a weekend system update, points to a likely data issue rather than a policy change.
It will be important to watch whether FSA acknowledges the issue publicly, whether credit bureaus receive the inaccurate default data, and how quickly the system can be corrected before borrowers see bigger impacts.
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Editor: Colin Graves
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