Cohort Default Rates and HEA Title IV 
December 12, 2023 
Eligibility: Background and Analysis 
Alexandra Hegji 
Most institutions of higher education (IHEs) that participate in the federal Pell Grant and Direct 
Analyst in Social Policy 
Loan programs—the primary federal financial aid programs for postsecondary students—are 
  
required to meet cohort default rate (CDR) requirements. The CDR is the primary federal 
Sylvia L. Bryan 
institutional accountability mechanism tied to the repayment of federal student loans. It is 
Research Assistant 
intended to evaluate institutional quality and the capacity of IHEs to administer federal student 
  
aid programs. An IHE may lose its eligibility to participate in the Pell Grant and/or Direct Loan 
programs if its CDR—the percentage of its federal student loan borrowers who enter repayment 
 
on their loans in a given fiscal year and default on those loans within three years of entering 
repayment—equals or exceeds specified thresholds.  
A primary criticism of the CDR metrics as they are currently constructed and applied is that IHEs rarely fail them, and when 
they do, they are rarely sanctioned for it. From 1992 to 1999 (early in the CDR’s use), 1,846 IHEs were subject to sanctions 
due to high CDRs. For the FY2017 CDRs, 12 IHEs were subject to CDR sanctions. Possible explanations for this trend 
include that high numbers of poorly performing IHEs may no longer be participating in the Title IV programs due to the 
initial culling of high-CDR IHEs, that IHEs have adjusted their practices to meet the CDR requirements, and that the 
expansion of student loan repayment flexibilities (e.g., income-driven repayment [IDR] plans) may make borrower default 
less likely. 
A closer examination of institutional performance under the CDR framework reveals that about 3% of IHEs had FY2017 
CDRs approaching but not meeting the statutory threshold (i.e., equal to or greater than 25% but less than 30%). Private for-
profit less-than-two-year institutions made up the greatest share of these IHEs. Private nonprofit four-year, public four-year, 
and private nonprofit two-year IHEs tended to have CDRs at or below the median CDR across all IHEs (9%). Public two-
year IHEs tended to have CDRs greater than the median but less than 20%—well below statutory thresholds. Private for-
profit (proprietary) four-year IHEs were somewhat evenly distributed on either side of the median. Across all institutions, 
those IHEs with CDRs of 25% or higher had average rates of undergraduate students receiving Pell Grants compared to all 
IHEs. Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) were more likely than non-HBCUs to have CDRs of 25% or 
higher. 
Should Congress opt to address concerns about the CDR’s utility, it might explore a variety of adjustments to the CDR 
framework. 
•  Adjusting CDR Thresholds: If the intent of the CDR framework is to weed out relatively poorly 
performing (i.e., higher CDR) IHEs, lower CDR thresholds for the application of CDR sanctions would 
presumably lead to more IHEs failing the stricter criteria.  
•  Supplementing the CDR: Incorporation of an additional measure that differentiates between IHEs with 
high or low proportions of students borrowing federal student loans, or that differentiates IHEs with student 
loan defaulters who owe larger or smaller amounts on their loans, may help students assess the relative risk 
of loan default at particular IHEs. This might also help illuminate the relative risk of monetary loss for the 
federal government as a lender.  
•  Eliminating the CDR: Developments in the federal student loan programs, such as the availability and 
utilization of IDR plans, have led some stakeholders to assert that the CDR is “effectively worthless” as a 
measure of institutional quality. It has become much easier for borrowers, even those who are struggling 
economically, to avoid default. Congress might consider whether to eliminate the CDR altogether. Doing 
so may free up administrative resources at the U.S. Department of Education and IHEs that are currently 
devoted to CDR oversight and compliance but may lead to issues like increased incidents of fraud in the 
federal student loan programs absent replacing the CDR with another federal student loan repayment 
performance measure, such as a loan repayment rate. 
•  Amending the CDR Calculation: Altering the CDR calculation—for instance, by accounting for periods 
of deferment of forbearance and/or by including PLUS Loans—may provide stakeholders with added 
clarity to institutional performance under the CDR, as either potential adjustment would presumably more 
fully encompass current borrower behaviors and experiences.  
Congressional Research Service 
 
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Contents 
History of Cohort Default Rates ...................................................................................................... 2 
1975 HEW Regulatory Actions ................................................................................................. 2 
1980s and 1990s Student Loan Default Issues .......................................................................... 4 
Congressional and Departmental Action............................................................................. 5 
The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Acts of 1989 and 1990 ............................................. 6 
Subsequent CDR Amendments in the 1990s and early 2000s ............................................ 7 
Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008 .............................................................................. 8 
Recent Developments .............................................................................................................. 10 
Key Elements of Current CDR Design and Procedures ................................................................ 12 
CDR Formula .......................................................................................................................... 12 
IHEs with 30 or More Borrowers Entering Repayment in a Cohort Fiscal Year .............. 13 
IHEs with Fewer Than 30 Borrowers Entering Repayment in a Cohort Fiscal Year ........ 13 
Formula Elements ............................................................................................................. 14 
CDR Procedures ...................................................................................................................... 16 
Draft CDRs ....................................................................................................................... 16 
Official CDRs ................................................................................................................... 17 
Enforcement ...................................................................................................................... 18 
Application of CDRs: IHEs That Have Lost Eligibility to Participate in HEA Title IV 
Programs Due to High CDRs ............................................................................................... 21 
National CDR .......................................................................................................................... 22 
Recent Institutional CDRs ....................................................................................................... 23 
Possible Explanations for Why CDRs Are No Longer Screening Out Many IHEs ................ 25 
Institutional Responses to the CDR .................................................................................. 25 
Student Loan Repayment Flexibilities .............................................................................. 26 
Income-Driven Repayment Plans ..................................................................................... 26 
Deferment and Forbearance .............................................................................................. 28 
COVID-19 Related Flexibilities ....................................................................................... 29 
CDR Distribution Within and Across Institutional Sectors ........................................................... 31 
Institutional Performance .................................................................................................. 32 
Measures That Could Possibly Be Incorporated Into a CDR-Style Accountability Metric: 
Student Borrower Rates (SBRs) and Student Loan Dollar Default Rates (SLDDRs) ............... 34 
An Initial Look at How SBRs and SLDDRs Align with CDRs Within and Across Sectors ......... 35 
CDRs and Student Borrower Rates ......................................................................................... 35 
Institutional Performance .................................................................................................. 37 
CDRs and Student Loan Dollar Default Rates ........................................................................ 37 
Institutional Performance .................................................................................................. 40 
Policy Considerations .................................................................................................................... 41 
Adjusting the CDR Thresholds ............................................................................................... 41 
Supplementing the CDR ......................................................................................................... 42 
Incorporating the SBR or SLDDR in a CDR-Style Metric ............................................... 42 
Considering Progress Toward Repayment ........................................................................ 43 
Eliminating the CDR ............................................................................................................... 44 
Amending the CDR Calculation ............................................................................................. 44 
Accounting for Periods of Deferment or Forbearance ...................................................... 44 
Including PLUS Loans ...................................................................................................... 45 
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Figures 
Figure 1. National Cohort Default Rates ....................................................................................... 23 
Figure 2. Distribution of IHEs Within Institutional Sectors by CFY2017 CDRs,  
Examined in Relation to Median CDR for all IHEs ................................................................... 33 
Figure 3. Distribution of IHEs by CFY2017 Cohort Default Rates and AY2015-2016 
Student Borrower Rate ............................................................................................................... 36 
Figure 4. CFY2017 Cohort Default Rates and  FY2017 Student Loan Dollar Default 
Rates ........................................................................................................................................... 39 
  
Tables 
Table 1. IHEs Subject to CDR Sanctions and Those Referred for Sanctions ................................ 25 
Table 2. National Cohort Default Rates ......................................................................................... 30 
  
Table A-1. CFY2017 Cohort Default Rate (CDR) Bands: IHEs and AY2015-2016 
Selected  Characteristics, by Sector and by HBCU Status ......................................................... 48 
Table A-2. CFY2017 Cohort Default Rates (CDRs) and AY2015-2016 Student Borrower 
Rates (SBR):  IHEs and AY2015-2016 Selected Characteristics, by Sector and by 
HBCU Status .............................................................................................................................. 51 
Table A-3. CFY2017 Cohort Default Rates (CDRs) and FY2017 Student Loan Dollar 
Default Rates (SLDDR): IHEs  and AY2015-2016 Selected Characteristics, by Sector 
and by HBCU Status .................................................................................................................. 55 
 
Appendixes 
Appendix A. Institutional Characteristics ...................................................................................... 47 
Appendix B. Methodology for Examining Three Options of Calculating CDRs by 
Institutional Characteristics ........................................................................................................ 60 
Appendix C. Selected Acronyms Used in This Report.................................................................. 63 
 
Contacts 
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 63 
 
Congressional Research Service 
Cohort Default Rates and HEA Title IV Eligibility: Background and Analysis 
 
itle IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (HEA; P.L. 89-329, as amended), authorizes 
the primary and largest (in terms of participation and dollars) federal programs that 
T provide financial assistance (e.g., Pell Grants and Direct Loans) to students for obtaining a 
postsecondary education at eligible institutions of higher education (IHEs).1 In academic year 
2021-2022 (July 1, 2021-June 30, 2022), approximately 6,000 institutions participated in the Title 
IV programs.2 In award year 2021-2022 (July 1, 2021-June 30, 2022), approximately $102 billion 
was disbursed to students attending IHEs through the Title IV federal student aid programs.3 
IHEs participating in the Title IV programs must meet a variety of requirements.4 Among these, 
IHEs may be required to meet cohort default rate (CDR) requirements. Under the CDR 
framework, an IHE may lose eligibility to participate in the Direct Loan and/or Pell Grant 
programs if the percentage of its federal student loan recipients who default on their loans within 
three years of entering repayment equals or exceeds specified thresholds. A CDR above the 
specified thresholds may also affect an IHE’s participation in other Title IV programs. 
The CDR is the primary federal institutional accountability mechanism tied to the repayment of 
federal student loans. It is intended to evaluate institutional quality and capacity to administer 
federal student aid programs. One of the assumptions underlying the CDR is that if an IHE is of 
sufficient quality, it will provide its students with the skills to enable them to repay their loans.5 In 
recent years, the CDR’s utility and design have been questioned by some Members of Congress, 
and various stakeholders have suggested an array of changes to the CDR to strengthen it as an 
institutional accountability tool. These proposals run the gamut from potentially eliminating the 
CDR altogether and replacing it with another student loan-based institutional accountability 
metric6 to updating how it is calculated to reflect new student loan borrowing patterns and 
institutional behaviors.7  
This report describes and analyzes the CDR as an institutional accountability metric. It begins 
with a history of the CDR and then describes how the CDR framework currently operates. It then 
presents information on historical and more recent CDR trends and discusses potential 
explanations for why CDRs are no longer screening out many IHEs. Next, the report takes a 
closer look at CDR distribution within and across institutional sectors and explores how two 
novel measures that could possibly be incorporated into a CDR-style accountability metric align 
with the CDR. These two measures are a student loan borrower rate (SBR), which measures the 
rate at which enrolled students borrow to attend an IHE; and a student loan dollar default rate 
(SLDDR), which measures the amount of student loan dollars owed by an IHE’s defaulted 
 
1 For information on the HEA Title IV aid programs, see CRS Report R43351, The Higher Education Act (HEA): A 
Primer. 
2 U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Integrated Postsecondary Education Data 
System Data Explorer, “Number and percentage distribution of Title IV institutions, by control of institution, level of 
institution, and region: United States and other U.S. jurisdictions, academic year 2021–22,” https://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/
Search?query=&query2=&resultType=all&page=1&sortBy=date_desc&overlayTableId=32461.  
3 U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Student Aid Data Center, “Title IV Program Volume 
Reports: Award Year Summary by School Type,” 2021-2022, https://studentaid.gov/sites/default/files/fsawg/
datacenter/library/SummarybySchoolType.xls. This total includes Title IV funds made available through the Direct 
Loan, Pell Grant, Iraq/Afghanistan Service Grant, and TEACH Grant programs. It excludes Title IV funds made 
available through the Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants and Federal Work-Study Programs. 
4 For an overview of the various requirements IHEs must meet to participate in the Title IV programs, see CRS Report 
R43159, Institutional Eligibility for Participation in Title IV Student Financial Aid Programs.  
5 U.S. Department of Education, “Student Assistance General Provisions and Guaranteed Student Loan and PLUS 
Programs,” 53 Federal Register 36216, September 16, 1988. 
6 See, for example, H.R. 4508 (115th Congress). 
7 See, for example, H.R. 4662 (116th Congress). 
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borrowers three years after entering repayment in a given year compared to the amount of student 
loans borrowed by all of an IHE’s student loan borrowers who entered repayment in that year. 
The report concludes with a discussion of relevant policy considerations. 
Appendix A to this report provides a series of tables that present information on the 
characteristics of IHEs as measured according to the CDR, the CDR paired with the SBR, and the 
CDR paired with the SLDDR. Appendix B provides details on the methodology CRS used to 
examine the three above-described methodologies. Appendix C provides a list of selected 
acronyms used in this report. 
History of Cohort Default Rates 
The use of student loan default rates as a means to evaluate institutional quality traces its genesis 
to regulatory actions taken by the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare’s (HEW’s) 
Office of Education (the precursor to the U.S. Department of Education) in 1975. In the 1980s 
and 1990s, a more contemporary cohort default rate framework was established through a series 
of legislative and regulatory actions, culminating with enactment of CDR provisions in the 
Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990 (OBRA 1990; P.L. 101-508). Since that time, 
Congress has updated the framework on several occasion, including making adjustments to how 
CDRs are calculated and enacting legislation to enable some IHEs that would otherwise be 
subject to CDR sanctions to avoid them. 
1975 HEW Regulatory Actions 
The HEA was initially enacted in 1965 and authorized the Guaranteed Student Loan (GSL) 
program. Under this program, private sector and state-based lenders made loans to borrowers 
using private capital and those loans were guaranteed against loss in limited circumstances (e.g., 
borrower death or default). Loans were either guaranteed by state or nonprofit agencies or, in 
states without a state or nonprofit agency, directly by the federal government.8  
As early as the beginning of the 1970s, the incidence of default under the program became a 
concern for policymakers. HEW estimated that segments of the program would see a default rate 
equal to 18.5% in FY19759 and sustained future increases in the default rate10 absent policy 
interventions.11 Some program participants stated these default rates were “intolerable.”12 
Stakeholders pointed to several factors as potentially contributing to increasing default rates in 
the GSL program overall. These included, for example, HEW difficulties with aspects of program 
management and implementation, a lack of borrower understanding of the responsibilities 
 
8 These two models of loan guarantee were collectively referred to as the GSL program; the federal guarantee model 
alone was referred to as the Federally Insured Student Loan (FISL) program. Over time, the dual approach of having 
state-based or federal guarantors was phased out. The state-based approach was retained and became the mechanism 
for providing guarantees for GSLs (and eventually Federal Family Education Loan program loans) across the nation. 
9 These estimates applied to the FISL portion of the program. At the time, data on default rates in the GSL program as a 
whole were incomplete and, thus, were not reported. U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Labor and Public Welfare, 
Examination of the Guaranteed Student Loan Program, 1974, 93rd Cong., 2nd sess., September 18-19, 1974, 
(Washington, DC: GPO, 1974), pp. 3-5 (hereinafter, “Examination of the Guaranteed Student Loan Program”). 
10 Default rate appears to have been defined as the ratio of loan dollars that defaulted divided by the amount of loans 
that entered repayment status. 
11 Examination of the Guaranteed Student Loan Program, pp. 3-5. 
12 Examination of the Guaranteed Student Loan Program, p. 144. 
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Cohort Default Rates and HEA Title IV Eligibility: Background and Analysis 
 
associated with borrowing,13 and gaps in student aid administrative processes at IHEs, which led 
to overborrowing in some cases.14  
Some stakeholders saw a relationship between the type of institutions attended by GSL borrowers 
and high default rates. Data indicated that proprietary (private, for-profit) IHEs and community 
colleges tended to have higher default rates compared to other types of IHEs. Some stakeholders 
believed this was a result of the types of students served by such institutions (e.g., student 
populations who tended to be at higher risk of default),15 while others highlighted issues with the 
educational quality of some IHEs that “defaulted on their obligation to train and instruct.”16  
In 1975, to address the default issue in the program, HEW’s Office of Education promulgated 
regulations that specified factors the Commissioner of Education (Commissioner) could use to 
determine whether an IHE was eligible to participate in the GSL program. These factors included 
a requirement that IHEs have a default rate of no more than 10%.17 Default rate was calculated by 
dividing the total dollar amount of defaulted GSLs made to the IHE’s students that had entered 
repayment by the total dollar amount of all GSLs to the IHE’s students that had entered 
repayment, and multiplied by 100. For an IHE with a default rate exceeding 10% or that failed to 
meet other specified conditions, the Commissioner could require it to take “reasonable and 
appropriate measures to alleviate” the conditions for initial or continued participation in the 
student aid programs.18 The IHE was given the opportunity to produce evidence that the 
conditions did not have an adverse effect on the GSL program or to submit a plan on how it 
proposed to improve on the conditions.19 The Commissioner could also impose limitations on an 
IHE “reasonably intended to correct such conditions.”20 Under this framework, the Commissioner 
had the burden to show that an IHE had failed to take reasonable steps to reduce default rates in 
order to justify termination of the IHE’s Title IV participation.21  
In response to the establishment of the conditions, some commentators believed that to avoid 
possible sanctions, some IHEs might raise admission standards to reduce default rates. They 
believed that such institutional actions might result in discrimination against minority and low-
income students. Others believed that the thresholds were too restrictive and that they may “hurt 
many schools that are doing a good job.”22 In reply, the Office of Education stated that while it 
did not encourage nor condone discrimination, it did have a responsibility to administer the GSL 
program in a sound and prudent manner and noted that when an IHE met any of the conditions, it 
was often the result of issues in the IHE’s GSL program administration. With respect to default 
rates in particular, the Office of Education noted there was “a good deal of evidence” indicating 
“a high correlation between default rates and the educational institution attended,” and that an 
 
13 Examination of the Guaranteed Student Loan Program, pp. 6-9, 10, 114, and 127-128. 
14 U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Need for Improved Coordination of Federally Assisted Student Aid 
Programs in Institutions of Higher Education, B-164031(1), August 2, 1972, pp. 12-19. 
15 Examination of the Guaranteed Student Loan Program, p. 130. 
16 Examination of the Guaranteed Student Loan Program, p. 83. 
17 The other factors were a requirement that no more than 20% of an IHE’s students withdrew from it during any 
academic year, no more than 60% of an IHE’s students received a GSL for any academic year, and the IHE’s financial 
condition was sufficient to enable it to provide the educational services for which its students who obtained GSLs had 
enrolled. 
18 U.S. Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, “Federal, State, and Private Programs of Low-Interest Loans to 
Students in Institutions,” 40 Federal Register 7596, February 20, 1975. 
19 40 Federal Register 7591, February 20, 1975. 
20 40 Federal Register 7591, February 20, 1975. 
21 53 Federal Register 36217, September 16, 1988. 
22 40 Federal Register 7591, February 20, 1975. 
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IHE’s high default rate may be “symptomatic that there are problems at the institution which 
adversely affect” the GSL program.23 
1980s and 1990s Student Loan Default Issues 
While Congress expressed concern over the high incidence of default in the GSL program as 
early as the 1970s, its initial efforts to address the issue via statutory provisions began in earnest 
in the 1980s. Congressional testimony from the General Accounting Office (now the Government 
Accountability Office [GAO]) show that between 1983 and 1989, loan volume under the GSL 
program rose 83% while defaults rose by 338%, and the share of program costs associated with 
defaults rose from approximately 10% in 1980 to 36% in 1990.24 
Stakeholders pointed to a number of issues as factors potentially leading to the rising incidence of 
default and associated increased costs in the GSL program, some of which echoed concerns raised 
about default rates in the 1970s. Some stakeholders speculated that changes in GSL borrower 
eligibility requirements and the failure of federal grant aid such as Pell Grants to keep pace with 
rising college costs resulted in a greater proportion of low-income students (who were more likely 
to default) borrowing loans to finance their postsecondary education.25 Research findings 
indicated that individuals who defaulted on their student loans tended to be individuals who did 
not complete their postsecondary education.26 Some observers believed that strengthening 
institutional operations, such as through improving educational support services and changing 
administrative practices, could aid in lowering loan defaults.27  
Concerns about institutional quality and practices (some of which were alleged to rise to the level 
of fraud) were also raised. While these issues were noted across all institution types, some 
observers identified proprietary IHEs as being particularly problematic and reported that default 
rates were disproportionately concentrated at such schools.28 According to GAO, proprietary 
IHEs accounted for 22% of all loans borrowed but 44% of all student loan defaults. Additionally, 
the default rates of students who attended proprietary IHEs were much higher (39%) than default 
rates of students who attended public and private nonprofit IHEs (e.g., 25% at public two-year 
IHEs, the next highest default rate among sectors).29 While it was acknowledged that proprietary 
IHEs tended to enroll higher concentrations of students who were more likely to default on their 
loans (e.g., low-income students), some Members of Congress argued that at least some of these 
proprietary IHEs “lacked strict program and enrollment criteria, as well as administrative 
policies” and did not offer valuable training to their students.30 
 
23 40 Federal Register 7591, February 20, 1975. 
24 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs, Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, Abuses in 
the Federal Student Aid Programs, 101st Cong., 2nd sess., February 20, 26, 1990, S.Hrg.101-659 (Washington, DC: 
GPO, 1990), pp. 6-7. 
25 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Education and Labor, Subcommittee on Postsecondary Education, Student Loan 
Defaults—The Belmont Task Force Report, 100th Cong., 2nd sess., February 2, 1988, Serial No. 100-64 (Washington, 
DC: GPO, 1988), p. 8, 10-11 (hereinafter, “Student Loan Defaults—The Belmont Task Force Report”). 
26 Student Loan Defaults—The Belmont Task Force Report, p. 12. 
27 Student Loan Defaults—The Belmont Task Force Report, p. 22. 
28 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Governmental Affairs, Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations, Abuses in 
Federal Student Aid Programs, 101st Cong., 2nd sess., February 20, 261990, S.Hrg.101-659 (Washington, DC: GPO, 
1990), pp. 12, 21. 
29 U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Guaranteed Student Loans: Analysis of Student Default Rates at 
7,800 Postsecondary Schools, GAO/HRD-89-63BR, July 5, 1989, pp. 15-16. GAO reported on the percentage of 
borrowers who had a loan guaranteed in academic year 1983 and defaulted on those loans by September 30, 1987. 
30 Student Loan Defaults—The Belmont Task Force Report, p. 24. 
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Congressional and Departmental Action 
To address the high rates of default, Congress and the U.S. Department of Education (ED) took a 
series of steps to address multiple aspects of the student loan program, including borrower-based, 
lender- and guaranty agency-based,31 and school-based policy interventions. For borrowers, 
Congress expanded borrower deferment and forbearance options,32 extended the period of 
delinquency after which loan default occurred, imposed stricter student loan borrowing limits, 
required borrowers to pay reasonable collection costs on defaulted loans, and authorized new loan 
repayment plans like a graduated repayment plan and an income-sensitive repayment plan. For 
lenders and guaranty agencies (GAs), Congress, among other actions, established lender 
disclosure requirements, imposed due diligence requirements in default aversion and collection 
activities, and prohibited lenders and GAs from engaging in certain fraudulent or misleading 
practices to induce individuals to borrow.33 
Regarding school-based interventions, Congress prohibited IHEs from using commissioned 
salespersons to promote the availability of the GSL program at the school.34 ED, however, 
initiated the primary school-based intervention in 1989 through a student loan default initiative. 
One of the stated aims of the initiative was to reduce defaults in the GSL program (hereinafter, 
the Federal Family Education Loan [FFEL] program)35 “by strengthening administrative 
sanctions available to the Secretary against postsecondary institutions with excessive default 
rates.”36 To that end, ED promulgated regulations37 specifying that it could terminate an IHE’s 
eligibility to participate in all of the HEA Title IV programs if the IHE’s fiscal year default rate 
exceeded (1) 40% for any fiscal year after 1989 and had not been reduced by 5% from its 
previous year’s default rate, or (2) 60% for FY1989, 55% for FY1990, 50% for FY1991, 45% for 
FY1992, and 40% for any fiscal year after FY1992. Fiscal year default rate was newly defined as 
the percentage of an IHE’s FFEL borrowers38 who entered repayment on those loans in a given 
 
31 Under the GSL program, private sector and state-based lenders made loans to students with nonfederal capital, and 
the federal government guaranteed lenders against loss due to borrower default. Lenders retained ownership of the 
loans and performed loan servicing functions such as billing borrowers, collecting loan payments, and initiating 
collections work on defaulted loans. State and nonprofit guaranty agencies received federal funds to play the lead role 
in administering many aspects of the program related to the loan guarantee, including taking possession of defaulted 
loans to continue collections work and reimbursing lenders when loans were placed in default. 
32 See, for example, P.L. 99-498. 
33 For more information, see CRS Report 91-246 EPW, Selected Amendments Enacted Since 1980 to Control Student 
Loan Defaults (archived, available to congressional clients upon request). 
34 For more information, see CRS Report 91-246 EPW, Selected Amendments Enacted Since 1980 to Control Student 
Loan Defaults (archived, available to congressional clients upon request). 
35 In 1988, the GSL program was renamed the Robert T. Stafford Student Loan program under P.L. 100-297. The 
Higher Education Amendments of 1992 (P.L. 102-325) subsequently dually named the program the FFEL program and 
the Robert T. Stafford Federal Student Loan program. Historically, the characteristics of the loan products offered 
under each of these three programs were changed many times by amendments. Some consistent characteristics of these 
programs included the ability of individuals to borrow loans without security or endorsement, the availability of an 
interest subsidy to qualifying borrowers, and the option for borrowers to defer payment of the principal and interest on 
their loans during specified periods, such as while enrolled in postsecondary education. 
36 53 Federal Register 36216, September 16, 1988. 
37 U.S. Department of Education, “Student Assistance General Provisions and Guaranteed Student Loan and PLUS 
Programs,” 54 Federal Register 24114, June 5, 1989. These regulations included other provisions intended to address 
student loan default rates, such as provisions requiring IHEs to conduct student loan entrance and exit counseling and 
requiring lenders to inform borrowers of when their loans were sold and to whom payments were to be made. 
38 Excluded from this calculation were borrowers of Supplemental Loans for Parents (the precursor to Parent PLUS 
Loans). 
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Cohort Default Rates and HEA Title IV Eligibility: Background and Analysis 
 
fiscal year and defaulted within a two-year period after entering repayment.39 An IHE subject to 
termination of its Title IV eligibility could avoid the sanction by demonstrating that it had acted 
diligently to implement a variety of specified default reduction measures.40 IHEs with high 
default rates but not so high as to meet the thresholds that warranted Title IV termination (default 
rates exceeding 20% but less than the previously mentioned threshold applicable to each year) 
could be required to implement default reduction measures (a default management plan) to 
address the major causes of default by the IHE’s students. These new regulations had the effect of 
placing the burden of proof on an IHE to show that its excessive default rates were due to factors 
beyond its control. This was a departure from the previous regulatory framework under which ED 
had the burden to show that an IHE had failed to take reasonable steps to reduce default rates in 
order to justify termination of the IHE’s Title IV participation.41 
ED’s regulations were somewhat controversial. During the rulemaking process, some 
stakeholders said it was “unfair” to require an IHE to show that its excessive default rates were 
due to factors beyond its control,42 and many objected to excluding the composition of an IHE’s 
student body as an acceptable explanation for a high default rate. In response, ED stated it 
believed that placing the burden of proof on an IHE was appropriate as, in its view, a high default 
rate gave “rise to a strong inference that its [administrative] capability is lacking,”43 especially 
given the high default rate thresholds ED had set in regulations. 
The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Acts of 1989 and 1990  
Less than one year after ED promulgated its default rate regulations, and in response to the rapid 
rate of borrowing of Supplemental Loans for Students (SLS; a type of FFEL program loan and a 
precursor to Unsubsidized Stafford Loans) and the potential defaults associated with those 
loans,44 Congress and the President enacted a statutory default rate provision under the Omnibus 
Budget Reconciliation Act of 1989 (OBRA 1989; P.L. 101-239). The provision prohibited 
undergraduate students enrolled at IHEs with a cohort default rate (CDR) of 30% or greater in the 
most recent fiscal year from borrowing SLS. CDR was defined in a similar manner as the fiscal 
year default rate specified in regulations: the percentage of Subsidized Loan and SLS borrowers 
who entered repayment in a given fiscal year (the cohort fiscal year [CFY]) and defaulted on 
those loans within a two-year period after entering repayment. This measure of CDR came to be 
known as a two-year cohort default rate.  
Soon thereafter, in 1990, OBRA 1990 revised the CDR measures and made consequences 
associated with them applicable to all types of loans made under the FFEL program. Specifically, 
an IHE whose CDR was equal to or greater than specified thresholds for the three most recent 
 
39 For IHEs with 29 or fewer borrowers who entered repayment in a given fiscal year, the default rate was calculated as 
the average of the IHE’s fiscal year default rates for the three most recent fiscal years; 54 Federal Register 24117, June 
5, 1989. 
40 54 Federal Register 24114, June 5, 1989. Such default reduction measures included, for example, revising 
admissions policies to ensure that enrolled students had a reasonable expectation of succeeding in their programs of 
study, improving the availability and effectiveness of academic counseling and job placement programs, and attempting 
to reduce withdrawal rates by improving curricula, facilities, materials, and other aspects of educational programs.  
41 53 Federal Register 36217, September 16, 1988. 
42 54 Federal Register 24123, June 5, 1989. 
43 53 Federal Register 24123, June 5, 1989. 
44 Congress reported that 97,000 SLS were made in 1985 and 717,000 SLS were made in 1989, a 639% increase. U.S. 
Congress, House Committee on the Budget, Providing for Reconciliation Pursuant to Section 5 of the Concurrent 
Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 1990, report to accompany H.R. 3299, 101st Cong., 1st sess., September 20, 
1989, H.Rept. 101-247, pp. 87-89. 
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consecutive cohort fiscal years was ineligible to participate in the FFEL program. The CDR 
threshold was 35% for CFY1991 and CFY1992 and 30% for each cohort fiscal year thereafter. 
The act specified that an IHE could appeal its loss of eligibility if it could demonstrate that ED’s 
calculation of its CDR was incorrect or there were “exceptional mitigating circumstances” that 
would make loss of program eligibility inequitable. Historically Black Colleges and Universities 
(HBCUs), tribally controlled community colleges (later referred to as tribally controlled colleges 
or universities [TCCUs]), and Navajo Community College (later renamed Diné College) were 
exempt from the CDR provisions until July 1, 1994.45 
ED subsequently promulgated implementing regulations for the new CDR requirements.46 Among 
other provisions, the regulations specified those exceptional mitigating circumstances that would 
make an IHE’s loss of program eligibility due to it exceeding the CDR thresholds inequitable. 
These included (1) the progress of the IHE in reducing its CDR,47 (2) whether the IHE was 
“successfully serving students from disadvantaged backgrounds,”48 and (3) whether the IHE had 
high student completion and placement rates while a percentage of the IHE’s students received 
federal student loans.49 
Subsequent CDR Amendments in the 1990s and early 2000s 
Following the enactment of the OBRA 1990 CDR requirements and their implementing 
regulations, a number of other statutory and regulatory changes were made to them, along with a 
variety of other measures intended to continue to enhance the integrity of the Title IV aid 
programs and reduce student loan defaults.50 Statutory and regulatory changes included the 
following: 
•  lowering the CDR threshold to 25% for CFY1994 onward51; 
•  requiring ED to prioritize HEA Title IV program reviews of IHEs with high 
CDRs52; 
•  extending the CDR requirements to the newly authorized Direct Loan program53; 
 
45 While the legislative history does not reveal an apparent rationale for this exemption, GAO reported that subsequent 
extensions of the exemption were made in light of “special challenges faced by HBCUs and Tribal Colleges.” U.S. 
Congress, Senate Committee on Labor and Human Resources, Higher Education Act Amendments of 1998, report to 
accompany S. 1882, 105th Cong., 2nd sess., May 4, 1998, S.Rept. 105-181 (Washington, DC: GPO, 1998), p. 50. 
46 U.S. Department of Education, “Student Assistance General Provisions and Guaranteed Student Loan Programs,” 56 
Federal Register 33332, July 19, 1991. 
47 Application of this exceptional mitigating circumstance was limited to a single year. 
48 An IHE was considered to meet this criterion if at least two-thirds of its at least half-time enrollment students were 
from disadvantaged economic backgrounds, at least two-thirds of its full-time students completed the educational 
program in which they were enrolled, and at least two-thirds of such students who completed their program obtained 
employment in an occupation for which the IHE provided training or subsequently enrolled in a more advanced 
educational program. 
49 56 Federal Register 33332, July 19, 1991. 
50 For example, the timing of when default was considered to have occurred was changed from 180 days of 
nonpayment to 270 days of nonpayment; The Higher Education Amendments of 1998 (P.L. 105-244). 
51 The Higher Education Amendments of 1992 (P.L. 102-325). 
52 The Higher Education Amendments of 1992 (P.L. 102-325). 
53 U.S. Department of Education, “Student Assistance General Provisions,” 60 Federal Register 49178, September 21, 
1995. 
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•  extending, on multiple occasions, the timeframe for the CDR exemptions for 
HBCUs and TCCUs, ultimately through June 30, 200454; 
•  creating incentives for IHEs to maintain low CDRs by exempting them from 
specified loan program administrative requirements55; 
•  adding to and modifying the instances when IHEs would be considered to have 
“exceptional mitigating circumstances”56; 
•  specifying that IHEs were ineligible to participate in the Pell Grant program due 
to high CDRs57;  
•  changing the duration of when default was considered to have occurred from 180 
days of nonpayment to 270 days of nonpayment58; and 
•  specifying that IHEs lost eligibility to participate in the FFEL and Direct Loan 
programs if their CDRs were greater than 40% for a single cohort fiscal year.59 
Higher Education Opportunity Act of 2008 
The enactment of the myriad policies to curb student loan defaults in the late 1980s and 
throughout the 1990s, including but not limited to CDR requirements, was followed by a 
substantial decrease in cohort default rates and an initial increase in associated institutional 
accountability actions. For example, the national CDR60 peaked with the CFY1993 CDR (22.4%) 
and gradually decreased to a low with the CFY2003 CDR (4.5%), with some scholars suggesting 
that this decrease was due, at least in part, to the implementation of the CDR requirements.61 
 
54 P.L. 103-235 extended the exemption from July 1, 1994, to July 1, 1998. Leading up to this extension, GAO 
estimated that absent an extension, 33 of the then 104 HBCUs could lose their Stafford Loan program (also referred to 
as the FFEL program at the time) eligibility; U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Default Rates at HBCUs, 
GAO/HEHS-94-97R, March 9, 1994, pp. 3-4. The Higher Education Amendment of 1998 (P.L. 105-244) extended the 
exemption from July 1, 1998, to July 1, 1999. After July 1, 1999, HBCUs and TCCUs remained exempt if they 
engaged in certain activities to help ensure their CDRs fell below statutory thresholds by July 1, 2002. (Leading up to 
this extension, GAO estimated that absent an extension, 22 of 98 HBCUs for which CDRs were then available could 
lose their Title IV eligibility; GAO, Student Loans: Default Rates at Historically Black Colleges and Universities, 
GAO/HEHS-97-33, January 21, 1997, p. 3.) The Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2001 (P.L. 106-554) extended the 
exemption from July 1, 2002, to June 30, 2004. Leading up to this extension, a House Education and Workforce 
Committee report recognized that HBCUs “play a vital role in providing access to postsecondary education for students 
who might not otherwise enroll in higher education.” U.S. Congress, House Committee on Education and the 
Workforce, Higher Education Technical Amendments of 2000, report to accompany H.R. 4505, 106th Cong., 2nd sess., 
June 12, 2000, H.Rept. 106-665, p. 14. 
55 Higher Education Amendments of 1998 (P.L. 105-244); and U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Labor and Human 
Resources, Higher Education Act Amendments of 1998, report to accompany S.1882, 105th Cong., 2nd sess., May 4, 
1998, S.Rept. 105-181 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2008), p. 30.  
56 U.S. Department of Education, “Student Assistance General Provisions,” 60 Federal Register 61760, December 1, 
1995; and Higher Education Amendments of 1998 (P.L. 105-244). 
57 Higher Education Amendments of 1998 (P.L. 105-244). 
58 Higher Education Amendments of 1998 (P.L. 105-244). 
59 U.S. Department of Education, “Student Assistance General Provisions, Federal Family Education Loan Program, 
William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program, and Federal Pell Grant Program,” 65 Federal Register 65632, 
November 1, 2000. 
60 The national CDR is a single CDR for all IHEs in a given cohort fiscal year. 
61 See the “National CDR” section of this report. See also, for example, Rajeev Darolia, What Happens to Students 
When the Federal Government Sanctions Colleges?, Third Way, October 22, 2019, p. 7, https://thirdway.imgix.net/
pdfs/override/What-Happens-to-Students-When-the-Fed-Gov-Sanctions-Colleges.pdf. 
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Additionally, the number of IHEs subject to sanctions due to high CDRs peaked with the 
CFY1992 CDRs (1,028 IHEs), but quickly declined to near zero with the CFY1998 CDRs.62  
Despite these gains, in 2003 ED’s Office of Inspector General (OIG) found that CDRs did not 
provide decisionmakers with sufficient information on Title IV student loan defaults overall.63 
Among other findings, OIG found that rates of default increased in the year immediately 
following the two-year measurement period used in CDRs at the time. OIG also found that 
borrowers in deferment or forbearance on their loans materially lowered IHEs’ CDRs, as 
borrowers in these statuses are considered to be in repayment on their loans for CDR purposes. 
Thus, these statuses could extend the period of time during which a borrower was not a risk of 
default, potentially through the end of the two-year measurement period.64 OIG concluded that 
without information that reflected general default trends, IHEs might continue to participate in the 
Title IV programs even though a significant portion of their students may ultimately default on 
their loans. 
While some Members of Congress believed that CDRs were “one effective mechanism” to 
protect the integrity of the federal student aid programs and were a “relatively reliable indicator 
of the quality of programs and resulting successes of students in the job market,” they also found 
that CDRs may not always provide an accurate depiction of student loan defaults. Thus, at least in 
part due to OIG’s findings, these Members proposed updating the definition of CDR to be the 
percentage of FFEL and Direct Loan program Subsidized Loan and Unsubsidized Loan 
borrowers65 who entered repayment in a given fiscal year and defaulted on those loans within 
three fiscal years of entering repayment (three-year cohort period).66 This definition of CDR 
came to be known as the three-year CDR. It was reported that an unofficial analysis by ED found 
that in using a three-year CDR, the overall CDR at proprietary IHEs would nearly double to 
16.7%, the overall CDR for public IHEs would increase from 4.7% to 7.2%, and the overall CDR 
at private nonprofit IHEs would increase from 3.0% to 4.7%.67 Opponents of these proposed 
changes largely represented proprietary IHEs, and argued that the changes would unfairly 
penalize proprietary IHEs for accepting large numbers of low-income students, who were more 
likely to default on their loans. They further argued that research had shown little correlation 
between default rates and institutional quality but rather reflected other factors such as student 
socioeconomic status, academic success, and postgraduate income.68 
While Congress and the President ultimately enacted a three-year CDR under the Higher 
Education Opportunity Act of 2008 (HEOA; P.L. 110-315), the CDR threshold was upward 
 
62 The CFY1992 CDRs resulted in ED imposing sanctions on IHEs in 1994. The CFY1998 CDRs resulted in ED 
imposing sanctions on IHEs in 2000. U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Federal Student Loans: Actions 
Needed to Improve Oversight of Schools’ Default Rates, GAO-18-163, April 26, 2018, p. 46; and GAO, Federal 
Student Loans: Actions Needed to Improve Oversight of Schools’ Default Rates, GAO-18-163, April 2018, p. 11, 
https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-18-163.pdf.  
63 U.S. Department of Education, Office of Inspector General, Audit to Determine if Cohort Default Rates Provide 
Sufficient Information on Defaults in the Title IV Loan Programs, ED-OIG/A03-C0017, December 22, 2003. 
64 GAO made similar findings in 1999; see GAO, Student Loans: Default Rates Need to Be Computed More 
Accurately, GAO/HEHS-99-135, July 28, 1999, https://www.gao.gov/assets/hehs-99-135.pdf. 
65 The Higher Education Reconciliation Act of 2005 (P.L. 109-171) authorized PLUS Loans to graduate and 
professional students beginning July 1, 2006. 
66 See U.S. Congress, House Committee on Education and Labor, College Opportunity and Affordability Act of 2007, 
report to accompany H.R. 4137, 110th Cong., 1st sess., December 19, 2007, H.Rept. 110-500, p. 261. 
67 Kelly Field, “For-Profit Colleges Lobby Against Proposed Change in Calculating Student-Loan Default Rates,” The 
Chronicle of Higher Education, January 30, 2008. 
68 Kelly Field, “For-Profit Colleges Lobby Against Proposed Change in Calculating Student-Loan Default Rates,” The 
Chronicle of Higher Education, January 30, 2008. 
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adjusted from 25% to 30% to address concerns raised by the proposal’s opponents.69 To 
implement these changes, the HEOA provided a three-year transition period during which the 
two-year CDR methodology remained in effect until three consecutive years’ worth of CDRs 
under the new three-year calculation were available. Thus, for the period of CFY2009 through 
CFY2011, both a two-year and a three-year CDR were calculated, but IHEs were not subject to 
sanctions pursuant to the three-year CDR until FY2014 (i.e., after the CFY2011 three-year CDR 
was available).70  
Recent Developments 
In general, statutory and regulatory CDR provisions have not been directly amended since the 
HEOA’s enactment and the promulgation of its implementing regulations. However, Congress 
and ED have taken a variety of actions in recent years that enabled some IHEs that would have 
otherwise been subject to loss of eligibility to participate in the Direct Loan and/or Pell Grant 
program to continue their participation: 
•  In 2014, in response to concerns over split-loan servicing,71 ED adjusted CDR 
calculations by excluding as defaulted those borrowers who defaulted on an applicable 
student loan but had one or more other Direct or FFEL program loans in a repayment, 
deferment, or forbearance status for at least 60 consecutive days and did not default 
during the three-year measurement period. ED only adjusted CDRs in this way for IHEs 
that would have otherwise been subject to the potential loss of Direct Loan and/or Pell 
Grant program eligibility with the release of the CFY2011 CDRs.72 It is unclear how 
many IHEs were affected by the adjustment. Reports indicate that some community 
colleges and HBCUs had requested the relief from ED73 and that just prior to the 
adjustment, 15 community colleges had two consecutive years of default rates above the 
30% threshold.74 
•  In 2018, as part of the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2018 (P.L. 115-123), Congress 
authorized ED to waive the application of certain CDR appeals requirements 
during the period of February 9, 2018, to March 23, 2018, for a public IHE that 
offered an associate’s degree, was located in an economically distressed county,75 
 
69 Kelly Field, “House Bill Retains Controversial Default-Rate Plan but Adds Safeguards,” The Chronicle of Higher 
Education, February 6, 2008. See also, Jacob P.K. Gross, Osman Cekic, and Don Hossler et al., “What Matters in 
Student Loan Default: A Review of the Research Literature,” Journal of Student Financial Aid, vol. 39, no. 1 (2009), 
pp. 19-29. 
70 The HEOA also made foreign nursing schools eligible to participate in the FFEL program. In doing so, it specified 
that such schools must reimburse ED for “the cost of any loan defaults for current and former students included” in 
their CDR calculations during the previous fiscal year. This provision has never been implemented because no foreign 
nursing school has ever participated in the Direct Loan program. This report will not further address CDRs at foreign 
nursing schools.  
71 Split-servicing occurs when a borrower’s HEA Title IV loans are serviced by more than one loan servicer. 
72 U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, “Adjustment of Calculation of Official Three-Year 
Cohort Default Rates for Institutions Subject to Potential Loss of Eligibility,” electronic announcement, September 23, 
2014, https://fsapartners.ed.gov/knowledge-center/library/electronic-announcements/2014-09-23/general-subject-
adjustment-calculation-official-three-year-cohort-default-rates-institutions-subject-potential-loss-eligibility. 
73 Michael Stratford, “Reprieve on Default Rates,” Inside Higher Ed, September 4, 2014. 
74 Paul Fain, “The Default Trap,” Inside Higher Ed, July 30, 2014. 
75 Economically distressed county was defined as “a county that ranks in the lowest 5% of all counties in the United 
States based on a national index of county economic status.” 
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and would have otherwise lost eligibility to participate in the Pell Grant 
program.76 
•  In 2018, as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2018 (P.L. 115-141), 
Congress authorized ED to waive the application of certain CDR requirements 
during FY2018 and FY2019 for (1) the above-specified IHE and (2) a public IHE 
or a Tribal College or University (TCU) whose fall enrollment for the most 
recently completed fiscal year comprised a majority of students who were Indian 
or Alaska Native and that would have otherwise lost eligibility to participate in 
the Pell Grant program.77 
•  In 2019, as part of the Further Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2020 (P.L. 116-
94), Congress authorized ED to waive the application of certain CDR appeals 
requirements during FY2020 and FY2021 for a public IHE that offered an 
associate’s degree, was located in an economically distressed county,78 was 
impacted by Hurricane Matthew, and would have otherwise lost eligibility to 
participate in the Direct Loan program.79 
•  In 2020, as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021 (P.L. 116-260), 
Congress authorized ED to waive the application of certain CDR appeals 
requirements during FY2021 and FY2022 for a private nonprofit IHE that would 
have otherwise lost eligibility to participate in the Pell Grant program and (1) 
was an Alaska Native-Serving Institution and a Native American-Serving Non-
Tribal Institution whose fall enrollment for the most recently completed 
academic year c0mprised a majority of students who were Indian or Alaska 
Native and were eligible to receive the maximum Pell Grant award, and (2) with 
a fall enrollment for the most recently completed academic year that comprised a 
majority of students who were African American and at least 50% or more 
received a Pell Grant.80  
•  In 2022, as part of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022 (P.L. 117-103), 
Congress authorized ED to waive the application of certain CDR appeals 
requirements during FY2022 and FY2023 for a public IHE that offered an 
associate’s degree, was located in an economically distressed county,81 was 
impacted by Hurricane Matthew, and would have otherwise lost eligibility to 
participate in the Direct Loan program.82 
 
76 This waiver specifically applied to Southeast Kentucky Community and Technical College. 
77 This waiver applied to Southeast Kentucky Community and Technical College and United Tribes Technical College 
(a TCU), respectively. 
78 Economically distressed county was defined as “a county with a poverty rate of at least 25% based on the U.S. 
Census Bureau’s Small Area Income and Poverty Estimate program data for 2017.” 
79 The waiver specifically applied to Denmark Technical College (an HBCU). 
80 The waiver specifically applied to Alaska Christian College and Arkansas Baptist College (an HBCU), respectively. 
81 Economically distressed county was defined as “a county with a poverty rate of at least 25% based on the U.S. 
Census Bureau’s Small Area Income and Poverty Estimate program data for 2017.” 
82 The waiver specifically applied to Denmark Technical College (an HBCU). 
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Key Elements of Current CDR Design and 
Procedures 
Currently, the HEA and regulations specify a variety of Title IV institutional eligibility 
requirements and consequences if an IHE’s CDR equals or exceeds certain thresholds.83 In short, 
an IHE is subject to loss of eligibility to participate in the Direct Loan and Pell Grant programs if 
its CDR is equal to or greater than 30% for each of its three most recent cohort fiscal years84 and 
is subject to loss of eligibility to participate in the Direct Loan program if its CDR is equal to or 
greater than 40% in its most recent cohort fiscal year.85 An IHE with a CDR equal to or greater 
than 30% but less than 40% for a single cohort fiscal year must establish a default prevention task 
force to prepare a default prevention plan.86 An IHE with a CDR equal to or greater than 30% but 
less than 40% for two consecutive cohort fiscal years must update its default prevention plan87 
and ED may make its certification88 to participate in the Title IV programs provisional.89  
An IHE may request an adjustment to the data underlying its CDR or appeal the application of its 
CDR to the IHE in a given year under circumstances specified in the HEA and regulations in 
order to avoid potential sanctions. IHEs with lower CDRs (less than or equal to 15%, depending 
on the circumstances) are eligible for some benefits that may relieve them from fulfilling 
specified student loan administration requirements.90 
CDR Formula 
To calculate an IHE’s CDR, one of two formulas may be used, depending on the number of an 
IHE’s borrowers who enter repayment on specified FFEL and Direct Loan program loans in a 
given fiscal year. One formula is for IHEs with 30 or more borrowers who enter repayment in a 
fiscal year, and the other formula is for IHEs with fewer than 30 borrowers who enter repayment 
in a fiscal year.  
Two key terms apply to both formulas: 
•  Cohort fiscal year (CFY): The fiscal year for which an IHE’s CDR is calculated 
and referring to the fiscal year in which a borrower entered repayment on their 
loan(s) for purposes of the CDR calculation.91  
•  Cohort default period: The three-year period that begins October 1 of the cohort 
fiscal year in which a borrower enters repayment (regardless of the actual month 
 
83 HEA Section 430(e) also specifies that ED must annually publish CDRs for FFEL program lenders, holders, and 
guaranty agencies. Those CDRs are not discussed in this report.  
84 HEA §§435(a)(2) and 401(j). 
85 34 C.F.R. §668.206(a)(1).  
86 A default prevention plan identifies factors causing an IHE’s CDR to exceed the threshold and establishes objectives 
and steps an IHE will take to improve its CDR; HEA §435(a)(7). 
87 HEA §435(a)(7). 
88 Certification refers to ED’s determination that an IHE meets Title IV participation requirements; an IHE may not 
participate in the Title IV programs until ED has certified it for participation. For additional information, see HEA 
Section 498. 
89 34 C.F.R. §668.16(m)(2). 
90 Separate CDR requirements apply to the Perkins Loan program. Those requirements are not discussed in this report. 
91 For example, when calculating the 2018 CDR, the cohort fiscal year is October 1, 2017-September 30, 2018. A 
borrower must enter repayment on an applicable loan at any time in this period to be included in the 2018 CDR. 
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and day on which the borrower enters repayment) on their applicable loan(s) and 
ends on September 30 of the second succeeding fiscal year.92 
For borrowers who have received a qualifying loan for attendance at more than one IHE, the 
borrower is attributed to each IHE where they obtained a loan. It is possible for a borrower to be 
included in more than one IHE’s CDR calculation in the cohort fiscal year. 
IHEs with 30 or More Borrowers Entering Repayment in a Cohort Fiscal Year 
For IHEs with 30 or more borrowers who enter repayment in a particular cohort fiscal year, the 
formula to calculate their CDR can be expressed as follows93: 
Specified FFEL and Direct Loan borrowers who entered repayment in a given cohort fiscal 
year and who defaulted during the cohort default period 
divided by 
Specified FFEL and Direct Loan borrowers who entered repayment in a given cohort fiscal 
year94 
These results are then multiplied by 100 to determine an IHE’s CDR. This formula is known as 
the non-average rate formula.95 
IHEs with Fewer Than 30 Borrowers Entering Repayment in a Cohort Fiscal 
Year 
For IHEs with fewer than 30 borrowers who enter repayment in a particular cohort fiscal year, the 
formula to calculate their CDR can be expressed as follows96: 
Specified FFEL and Direct Loan borrowers who entered repayment in a given cohort fiscal 
year or either of the two preceding fiscal years and who defaulted during the cohort default 
period for the cohort fiscal year in which they entered repayment 
divided by 
Specified FFEL and Direct Loan borrowers who entered repayment in a given cohort fiscal 
year or the two preceding fiscal years97 
These results are then multiplied by 100 to determine the IHE’s CDR. This formula is known as 
the average rate formula. 
 
92 For example, a borrower who enters repayment on their loan in May 2018 would be included in the cohort default 
period spanning October 1, 2017-September 31, 2020. 
93 Of the 4,731 IHEs that had CDRs issued for CFY2019, 4,000 (about 85%) had their CDRs calculated according to 
this formula; U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Official Cohort Default Rate for Schools, 
FY2019, https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2022-09/PEPS300REPORT.xlsx. 
94 HEA §435(m)(1)(A). 
95 In practice. ED truncates the results of an IHE’s CDR calculation to the first decimal place. 
96 Of the 4,731 IHEs that had CDRs issued for CFY2019, 731 (about 15%) had their CDRs calculated according to this 
formula; U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Official Cohort Default Rate for Schools, 
FY2019, https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2022-09/PEPS300REPORT.xlsx. 
97 HEA §435(m)(1)(C). 
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Formula Elements 
Although the non-average rate and average rate formulas vary in terms of the group of borrowers 
included in each,98 they share several common elements, including the types of borrowers 
considered in each formula, the definition of default, and how borrowers are treated under the 
formulas in special circumstances. 
Types of Borrowers Included in the CDR Calculation 
The CDR calculation includes all of an IHE’s current and former students who, during the cohort 
fiscal year (and for purposes of the average rate calculation, the two preceding fiscal years) 
entered repayment on an FFEL or Direct Loan program Subsidized Loan or Unsubsidized Loan 
(hereinafter referred to collectively as Subsidized Loans and Unsubsidized Loans, unless 
otherwise specified) borrowed to attend the IHE.99 All other loans types, including FFEL and 
Direct Loan program PLUS Loans to parents of dependent undergraduate students and PLUS 
Loans to graduate and professional students, as well as Perkins Loans, are excluded from the 
calculation.100 TEACH Grants that were converted into an Unsubsidized Direct Loan are also 
excluded.101  
Borrowers of FFEL and Direct Loan program Consolidation Loans (hereinafter referred to 
collectively as Consolidation Loans, unless otherwise specified) are included in the CDR 
calculation if their Consolidation Loan was used to repay a Subsidized Loan or Unsubsidized 
Loan (even if the Consolidation Loan also repaid some excluded loans) used to attend the IHE. A 
borrower of a Consolidation Loan that was used solely to repay excluded loans is omitted from 
the calculation altogether.102  
Denominator 
For the non-average rate formula, the denominator of an IHE’s CDR calculation includes the 
number of borrowers of applicable loan types who entered repayment on their loans in the 
CFY.103 For the average rate formula, the denominator of the CDR calculation includes the 
number of borrowers of applicable loan types who entered repayment in the current CFY or the 
two preceding fiscal years.104  
For both formulas, borrowers are included in the denominator based on when their applicable 
loans entered repayment, as determined under the requirements attached to the type of loan.105 
Subsidized Loans and Unsubsidized Loans generally enter repayment the day after the six-month 
grace period that begins when a borrower ceases to be enrolled on at least a half-time basis in an 
 
98 The average rate formula accounts for an IHE with small numbers of borrowers entering repayment in a cohort fiscal 
year by essentially pooling borrowers who entered repayment and borrowers who defaulted across multiple years. 
99 For borrowers who have received a qualifying loan for attendance at more than one IHE, the borrower is attributed to 
each IHE where they obtained a loan. It is possible for a borrower to be included in more than one IHE’s CDR 
calculation in the same fiscal year. 34 C.F.R. §668.202(b)(2). 
100 HEA §435(m)(1). 
101 34 C.F.R. §668.202(b)(3). 
102 34 C.F.R. §668.202(b)(3) and (c)(1)(i); and U.S. Department of Education, Cohort Default Rate Guide: September, 
2020, p. 2.1-9 (hereinafter, “ED, CDR Guide”). 
103 HEA §435(m)(1)(A). 
104 HEA §435(m)(1)(C). For example, for CFY2020, the average rate CDR denominator would include borrowers who 
entered repayment on their applicable loans in FY2018, FY2019, or FY2020. 
105 34 C.F.R. §668.201(f). 
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eligible educational program. For CDR purposes, Consolidation Loans used to repay Subsidized 
Loans or Unsubsidized Loans are considered to have entered repayment on the date that the 
underlying Subsidized Loans and Unsubsidized Loans entered (or would have entered) 
repayment.106  
Several special circumstances may affect whether a borrower is included in an IHE’s 
denominator. For example, if a borrower’s loan is discharged due to school closure, false 
certification, or identity theft, the borrower is excluded from the denominator regardless of 
whether the discharge occurred prior to or after entry into repayment. On the other hand, if a 
borrower’s loan is discharged due to bankruptcy, death, total and permanent disability, or other 
types of loan discharge107 before they entered repayment on their loan or after they enter 
repayment but before the end of the cohort default period and before they default, then the 
borrower is included in the denominator for the cohort fiscal year based on the date the loan was 
discharged.108 
Numerator 
For both the non-average rate formula and the average rate formula, a borrower is included in the 
numerator of the CDR calculation if (1) they were included in the denominator and (2) they 
defaulted on one or more of their applicable loans—or met other specified conditions (described 
below)—in the cohort default period (i.e., in the fiscal year in which they entered repayment or in 
either of the two succeeding fiscal years).109 
Whether a loan is considered to be in default depends, in part, on the type of loan. All Direct Loan 
program loans and those FFEL program loans held by ED110 are considered to be in default after 
the borrower has failed to make payments, when due, for 360 days.111 FFEL program loans not 
held by ED are considered to be in default only if a GA has paid a default claim to the lender that 
holds the loan (after no more than 420 days of borrower delinquency).112  
 
106 See, ED, CDR Guide, p. 2.1-11. This appears to hold true even in instances in which a borrower obtained a 
Consolidation Loan during the grace period for the underlying loans. For non-CDR purposes, a Consolidation Loan 
generally enters repayment on the date it is disbursed. 34 C.F.R. §§682.200 and 685.207(e). 
107 For additional information on these on loan discharges, see CRS Report R45931, Federal Student Loans Made 
Through the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program: Terms and Conditions for Borrowers. 
108 Several other special circumstances may affect whether a borrower is included in the denominator. These special 
circumstances and their treatment under the CDR calculation are detailed in ED, CDR Guide, pp. 2.1-11 through 2.1-
14. 
109 34 C.F.R. §668.202(c). For example, under the non-average rate formula for CFY2020, a borrower would be 
included in the numerator if they (1) entered repayment in CFY2020 and (2) defaulted on one or more of their 
applicable loans or met other specified conditions in FY2020, FY2021, or FY2022. Under the average rate formula for 
CFY2020, a borrower would be included in the numerator if they (1) entered repayment in FY2018, FY2019, or 
FY2020 and (2) defaulted on one or more of their loans or met other specified conditions in the cohort default period 
for the fiscal year in which they entered repayment (e.g., borrowers who entered repayment in FY2020 and defaulted or 
met other specified conditions in FY2020, FY2021, or FY2022). 
110 A FFEL program loan may be held by ED in several circumstances, such as after it has been assigned to ED to 
protect the federal fiscal interest or if it was sold to ED under temporary purchase authority graduated to the department 
under the Ensuring Continued Access to Student Loans Act of 2008 (ECASLA; P.L. 110-227) and extended under P.L. 
110-350. HEA §§428(c)(8) and 459A; 34 C.F.R. §682.409. 
111 34 C.F.R. §668.202(c). All Direct Loan program loans are held by ED. FFEL program loans may be held by ED, 
private lenders, or guaranty agencies. 
112 A borrower is considered in default when they have failed to make payments when due on their loans for 270 days 
for a loan repayable in monthly installments or for 330 days for loans repayable in less frequent installments. When a 
borrower of an FFEL program loan not held by ED defaults, the loan holder (e.g., the original lender) files a default 
(continued...) 
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A borrower is not considered in default, and thus excluded from the numerator, if the loan that 
defaulted was rehabilitated113 before the end of the cohort default period.114 On the other hand, a 
borrower who consolidates out of default or pays their loan in full after defaulting before the end 
of the cohort default period is considered to have defaulted for CDR purposes, and thus is 
included in the numerator.115 In addition, a loan on which a payment was made by the IHE (or 
any entity or individual affiliated with the IHE) in order to avoid borrower default is considered 
in default, and thus the borrower is included in the numerator.116 
CDR Procedures 
Statute, regulations, and guidance specify procedures ED follows to notify IHEs of their CDRs 
and for IHEs to request adjustments to their CDRs or otherwise appeal the application of their 
CDRs to avoid potential sanctions. 
Draft CDRs 
A draft CDR is calculated by ED for an IHE to review before it issues an official CDR.117 ED 
typically transmits draft CDRs, along with the data used to calculate them, to IHEs in February.118 
ED calculates each IHE’s draft CDR using the non-average rate formula regardless of the number 
of borrowers who entered repayment in the fiscal year.119  
After receiving its draft CDR, an IHE may submit various challenges to it, based either on 
incorrect data used in the calculation of the draft CDR or on a low rate of participation of its 
enrolled students in the Direct Loan program (known as a participation rate index [PRI] 
challenge).120 The former gives an IHE the opportunity to identify and correct any inaccuracies in 
the underlying data that may ultimately be used to calculate its official CDR. The latter gives 
IHEs the opportunity to challenge a potential loss of eligibility to participate in the Direct Loan 
 
claim (or insurance claim) with a GA. The GA then pays the claim, which serves as a payment for the holder’s losses 
stemming from the default, and the holder assigns the defaulted loan to the GA. The last day a lender may file a default 
claim and remain within regulatory filing guidelines is the 360th day of delinquency for a loan with monthly 
installments and the 420th day of delinquency for a loan with less frequent installments; 34 C.F.R. §§682.200(b) and 
682.406; see also, Common Manual Governing Board, Common Manual: Unified Student Loan Policy 2022 Annual 
Update, June 2022, ch. 13, p. 15, https://commonmanual.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/CM2022.pdf. 
113 Rehabilitation offers borrowers who have defaulted an opportunity to have their loan(s) reinstated as active and to 
have their borrower benefits and privileges restored. In general, to rehabilitate a loan, a borrower must, within a 10-
month period, voluntarily make nine reasonable and affordable monthly payments on their defaulted loan within 20 
days of the due date; HEA §§428F(a) and 435(m)(2)(C); 34 C.F.R. §§682.405(a)(2) and 685.211(f). 
114 In addition, an FFEL program loan is not considered in default if it was repurchased by a lender because the default 
claim was submitted or paid in error; 34 C.F.R. §668.202(c)(2)(ii). 
115 ED, CDR Guide, p. 2.1-12. 
116 HEA §435(m)(2)(C). Several other special circumstances may affect whether a borrower is included in the 
numerator. These special circumstances and their treatment under the CDR calculation are detailed in ED, CDR Guide, 
pp. 2.1-11 through 2.1-14. 
117 34 C.F.R. §668.201(e). 
118 ED, CDR Guide, p. 2.2-2. 
119 34 C.F.R. §668.204(a)(1). 
120 HEA § 435(a)(8). In certain instances, an IHE may submit a PRI challenge before it receives its current-year draft 
CDR. See ED, CDR Guide, p. 4.2-7. 
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and/or Pell Grant programs or potential placement on provisional certification in the Title IV 
programs121 upon the issuance of its official CDR.122  
Official CDRs 
The official CDR is the CDR on which an IHE’s eligibility to participate in the Title IV programs 
is judged. Generally, ED transmits to IHEs and publicly releases official CDRs about six months 
after the draft CDRs are transmitted to IHEs; official CDRs must be released no later than 
September 30 of each year.123 As with the draft CDR, ED also transmits the data used to calculate 
an IHE’s official CDRs to each school to enable it to identify and correct any inaccuracies.124 ED 
calculates the official CDR using either the non-average rate or average rate formula, as 
applicable. An official CDR cannot be calculated for an IHE with fewer than 30 borrowers 
entering repayment in a cohort fiscal year if the IHE did not also have an official or unofficial125 
CDR for either or both of the two previous fiscal years.126 Thus, such IHEs would not be subject 
to CDR sanctions, nor would they be eligible for benefits. 
IHEs may submit a number of requests for adjustments or appeals127 contending that some of the 
data used to calculate the official CDR should be corrected due to the data being inaccurate, or 
based on allegations that some of the defaulted loans included in an IHE’s CDR were improperly 
serviced.128 If such an adjustment or appeal is successful, the IHE’s CDR may be lowered, raised, 
or left alone.129 If an IHE’s CDR is lowered, it may avoid associated sanctions or become eligible 
for certain administrative flexibilities.130  
IHEs may also submit a variety of appeals contending that they have exceptional mitigating 
circumstances for which they should not be subject to CDR sanctions.131 For example, an IHE 
may submit an economically disadvantaged appeal, which alleges that it should not be subject to 
potential loss of Title IV eligibility or potential placement on provisional certification in the Title 
IV programs because it has a high number of low-income students and meets either specific 
 
121 Under provisional certification, although ED certifies that an IHE has demonstrated it is capable of meeting Title IV 
institutional participation standards within a specified timeframe and is able to meet its responsibilities under its 
program participation agreement (PPA), the IHE must meet “any additional conditions specified in the institution’s 
program participation agreement that the Secretary requires the institution to meet in order for the institution to 
participate under provisional certification.” These additional conditions may include, for example, meeting additional 
reporting requirements. 34 C.F.R. §668.13(c)(4)(ii). 
122 For additional information on these challenges, see 34 C.F.R. §§668.204(b) and (c); and ED, CDR Guide, pp. 4.1-2 
through 4.2-12. 
123 ED, CDR Guide, p. 2.2-2. 
124 34 C.F.R. §668.205(b). 
125 A CDR is considered unofficial if an IHE does not have three consecutive years’ worth of CDR data to calculate the 
average rate formula; U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, “Official Cohort Default Rate 
Search for Schools,” https://nsldsfap.ed.gov/cdr-searchable-database/school/search, accessed August 8, 2023. 
126 Such an IHE would have an unofficial CDR calculated using the non-average rate formula and current year data. 
ED, CDR Guide, p. 2.1-5. 
127 In general, an IHE may submit more than one adjustment or appeal.  
128 HEA §435(a)(4). An improper loan servicing appeal alleges that a defaulted loan borrower’s servicer failed to 
perform one of several enumerated activities (e.g., failed to send at least one letter urging the borrower to make 
payments on their loans); see 34 C.F.R. §668.212. 
129 HEA §435(a)(2)(i). For additional information on these types of adjustments and appeals, see 34 C.F.R. §§668.209-
668.212; and ED, CDR Guide, pp. 4.3-2 through 4.6-15, and Appendix A Timeline. 
130 ED, CDR Guide, p. 3.1-4. 
131 HEA §§435(a)(2)(A)(ii)-(iii) and 435(a)(5). For additional information on these types of appeals, see 34 C.F.R. 
§§668.213-668.216; and ED, CDR Guidance, pp. 4.7-2 through 4.10-3. 
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placement or completion rates. Other appeals IHEs may submit include a PRI appeal (which is 
calculated in the same manner and uses the same thresholds as the PRI challenge), an average 
rates appeal, and a 30-or-fewer borrowers appeal.132 If an IHE is successful in one of these types 
of appeals, it may avoid sanctions associated with its CDR; however, its CDR will not be 
affected.133 Thus, the CDR in question may affect an IHE’s Title IV eligibility in future years. 
An IHE’s loss of eligibility to participate in the Pell Grant and/or Direct Loan programs does not 
take effect while its request for an adjustment or appeal is pending, although an IHE may choose 
to suspend its participation in the Direct Loan program during the pendency of an adjustment or 
appeal. If an IHE does not suspend its participation in the Direct Loan program during this time 
but its request(s) for any adjustments or appeals is not successful in qualifying the IHE for 
continued Title IV eligibility, the IHE is liable for certain costs associated with any Direct Loans 
it originated and disbursed to its students more than 30 days after it received notice of its official 
CDR.134 
Enforcement 
A CDR is calculated for each IHE that has a program participation agreement (PPA).135 An IHE 
may have a single PPA covering the main campus and some or all of its branch campuses and 
locations, or it may have separate PPAs covering the main campus and each branch campus and 
location that meets Title IV requirements. Thus, an IHE’s CDR may represent borrower defaults 
from one or multiple campuses associated with a single PPA; likewise, an IHE having multiple 
entities with PPAs may have separate CDRs calculated for each entity associated with a unique 
PPA.136 The CDR requirements apply to both foreign and domestic  
IHEs that participate in the Title IV student aid programs.137  
Corrective Actions and Sanctions for High CDRs 
Under HEA Section 435 and accompanying regulations, an IHE may be subject to a range of 
corrective actions and sanctions if its CDR equals or exceeds specified thresholds.138 If an IHE’s 
 
132 In practice, before notifying IHEs of their official CDRs, ED automatically determines whether an IHE qualifies for 
the average rates appeal or the 30-or-fewer borrowers appeal, as the data necessary for those appeals are generally 
readily available to ED. ED then notifies an IHE that it is not subject to sanctions due to meeting the appeals’ criteria at 
the same time it notifies the IHE of its official CDR. If an IHE disagrees with ED’s determination of whether it 
qualifies for an average rates or 30-or-fewer borrowers appeal, it may submit such appeals to ED; see ED, CDR Guide, 
pp. 4.9-3; 4.10-2 through 4.10-3. 
133 ED, CDR Guide, p. 3.1-4. 
134 Regulations specify that for any FFEL or Direct Loan program loans, ED is to estimate the “amount of interest, 
special allowance, reinsurance, and any related or similar payments” ED makes or is obligated to make on those loans. 
In general, the costs specified in the regulations only relate to FFEL program loans; thus, which Direct Loan program 
costs an IHE may be liable for is unclear. Amounts of Direct Loans disbursed more than 45 days after an IHE submits 
an appeal to ED are excluded from an IHE’s liability; 34 C.F.R. §668.206(e) and (f). 
135 IHEs that participate in the Title IV student aid programs must have a current PPA. A PPA is a document in which 
an IHE agrees to comply with the laws, regulations, and policies applicable to the Title IV programs. 
136 Whether a PPA covers one or more campuses depends on how an IHE is organized, which is a determination made 
by the IHE. For example, three institutional campuses may be covered by a single PPA, or three related campuses may 
be covered under three individual PPAs. In the first scenario, the three campuses would have a collective CDR 
calculated; in the second scenario, each individual campus would have a CDR calculated. 
137 Foreign IHEs may only participate in the Direct Loan program; HEA §102(a)(1)(C). 
138 In addition to the enforcement actions discussed herein, HEA Section 102(a)(2)(A)(iii)(IV) provides that foreign 
nursing schools are to reimburse ED for the cost of any loan defaults for current and former students included in the 
school’s CDR during the previous fiscal year. This provision has never been implemented because no foreign nursing 
school has ever participated in the Direct Loan program. 
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CDR is equal to or greater than 30% in a fiscal year, it must establish a default prevention task 
force to identify the factors causing the IHE’s CDR to equal or exceed the threshold, establish 
measurable objectives to improve the IHE’s CDR, and specify actions the IHE can take to 
improve student loan repayment, including counseling about loan repayment. The resulting 
document is called a default prevention plan, which an IHE must submit to ED for review and 
technical assistance.139  
If an IHE’s CDR is greater than or equal to 30% for two consecutive fiscal years, its certification 
to participate in the HEA Title IV programs may become provisional (the IHE is not considered 
administratively capable)140 and the IHE’s default prevention task force must review and revise its 
default prevention plan and submit the revised plan to ED. ED may require the IHE to amend the 
plan to include actions that ED determines will promote student loan repayment.141 Per 
regulations, ED may determine that the IHE is unable to meet its financial responsibility or the 
administrative obligations necessary to comply with the Title IV requirements if the fact that the 
IHE’s two most recent CDRs exceed the thresholds is “likely to have a material adverse effect on 
the financial condition of the institution.”142 If ED makes such a determination, the IHE may 
continue to participate in the Title IV programs under alternative standards, under which the IHE 
would be required to submit to ED an irrevocable letter of credit (LOC) or other financial 
protection,143 and potentially meet other specified requirements.  
If an IHE’s CDR is greater than or equal to 30% for three consecutive fiscal years, it loses its 
eligibility to participate in the Direct Loan and Pell Grant programs for the remainder of the fiscal 
year in which the determination is made and the two succeeding fiscal years.144  
Per regulations, if an IHE’s CDR is greater than or equal to 40% in a single fiscal year, it loses its 
eligibility to participate in the Direct Loan program for the remainder of the fiscal year in which 
the determination is made and the two succeeding fiscal years.145 
An IHE may not regain Title IV eligibility following loss due to a high CDR until the above-
described years of ineligibility have passed; the IHE has paid ED, or has entered into an 
agreement to pay ED, for Direct Loan program liabilities accrued during the pendency of an 
appeal; the IHE submits a new application to participate in the Title IV programs to ED and ED 
 
139 34 C.F.R. Appendix A to Subpart N of Part 688 contains a sample default prevention plan. 
140 34 C.F.R. §668.16(m)(2). 
141 HEA §435(a)(7). See also 34 C.F.R. §668.217. 
142 34 C.F.R. §668.171(d). The conditions enabling ED to make such determinations are referred to as discretionary 
triggers and include institutional standards other than CDRs that ED may evaluate. In making this determination, ED is 
to review the IHE’s efforts to remedy or mitigate the causes of the condition (e.g., the high CDRs) or to assess the 
extent to which there are anomalous circumstances leading to the triggering event. The existence of two or more 
discretionary triggers at an IHE is considered a mandatory trigger, for which ED will take immediate action without 
evaluating whether their existence will have a material adverse effect on the IHE’s financial condition. U.S. 
Department of Education, “Student Assistance General Provisions, Federal Family Education Loan Program, and 
William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program,” 84 Federal Register 49788, 49868, September 23, 2019. Effective July 
1, 2024, updated ED regulations would recategorize an IHE’s CDR being greater than or equal to 30% for two 
consecutive fiscal years as a mandatory trigger rather than a discretionary trigger. U.S. Department of Education, 
“Financial Responsibility, Administrative Capability, Certification Procedures, Ability to Benefit (ATB),” 88 Federal 
Register 74704, October 31, 2023. 
143 The precise amount of the LOC or financial protection may vary depending on circumstances. In general, public 
IHEs would not be required to submit LOCs or financial protection to ED. See 34 C.F.R. §668.175(c) and (f). 
144 HEA §435(a)(2). 
145 34 C.F.R. §668.206(a)(1) and (g). 
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determines that the IHE meets all Title IV participation requirements; and the IHE enters into a 
new Title IV PPA with ED.146 
IHEs with high CDRs that do not equal or exceed the specified thresholds may also be subject to 
additional oversight. HEA Section 498A(a)(2) requires ED to prioritize program reviews of IHEs 
with CDRs of greater than or equal to 25% or that place an IHE in the highest 25% of IHEs with 
CDRs.147 In addition, ED policy specifies that while IHEs are typically certified to participate in 
the Title IV programs for up to six years, IHEs with high CDRs but not so high as to equal or 
exceed the 30% threshold may only be granted certification for two years.148 
Changes in Status and Preventing Evasion of CDR Application 
HEA Section 435(m)(3) requires ED to promulgate regulations designed to prevent IHEs from 
evading the application of CDRs through a variety of tactics including branching, consolidation, 
change of ownership or control, and other methods. To this end, ED regulations specify how an 
IHE’s CDR is to be determined if it undergoes a change in status. For purposes of these 
regulations, a change in status occurs when (1) an IHE acquires or merges with another Title IV 
participating IHE, (2) an IHE acquires a branch campus or location from another Title IV 
participating IHE, or (3) a branch campus or location of a Title IV participating IHE becomes a 
separate new IHE.  
Depending on the type of change in status, for the CDRs published just prior to the change, the 
IHE undergoing the change may have another IHE’s CDR applied to it. For subsequent years, an 
IHE undergoing a change in status would have its CDR calculated by including its applicable 
borrowers and any other IHE party to the change in status.149  
In some circumstances, if an IHE that is already subject to loss of Title IV eligibility as a result of 
CDRs is a party to a transaction with a Title IV-eligible IHE that results in a change in status or 
other specified outcomes,150 the Title IV-eligible IHE would newly be subject to loss of Title IV 
eligibility. That IHE would have all of the same challenge, adjustment, and appeal options as the 
IHE that was initially subject to loss of Title IV eligibility.151 
Benefits for Low CDRs 
The HEA specifies some benefits available to IHEs with low CDRs, which were enacted to 
incentivize IHEs to maintain low CDRs by exempting them from specified Title IV 
administrative requirements. An IHE whose most recent official CDR is less than 15% for each of 
 
146 34 C.F.R. §668.206(g). 
147 During a program review, ED evaluates an IHE’s compliance with the Title IV program requirements and identifies 
actions the IHE must take to correct any problem(s). If during a program review ED determines that an IHE is unable to 
meet its financial responsibility or administrative obligations necessary to comply with the Title IV requirements, ED 
may take corrective actions or impose sanctions. 
148 It is unclear what is considered to be a high CDR for these purposes; U.S. Government Accountability Office 
(GAO), Federal Student Loans: Actions Needed to Improve Oversight of Schools’ Default Rates, GAO-18-163, April 
26, 2018, p. 11, https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-18-163.pdf. 
149 34 C.F.R. §668.203. For additional information, see ED, CDR Guide, p. 2.5-5. It has been reported that in the 
proprietary sector, some institutional parent companies with multiple IHEs each with their own PPA may use these 
rules in their favor specifically to enable them to avoid potential CDR sanctions. See The Institute for College Access 
and Success, Comments on Topics for Negotiated Rulemaking, Docket ED: ED-2015-OPE-0103, September 16, 2015, 
pp. 15-17, https://ticas.org/wp-content/uploads/legacy-files/pub_files/ticas_dtr_neg_reg_comments.pdf. 
150 These include, for example, a transfer of assets, a change in name, or a contract for services; 34 C.F.R. 
§668.207(a)(1). 
151 34 C.F.R. §§668.203 and 668.207.  
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the three most recent fiscal years for which data are available may disburse Direct Loan program 
loans for a semester, trimester, quarter, or four-month period in a single installment152 and is not 
required to delay disbursement of a Direct Loan for 30 days for first-time, first-year 
undergraduate borrowers.153 An IHE whose most recent official CDR is less than 5% and is a 
home eligible institution154 that is originating a Direct Loan to cover a student’s cost of attendance 
in a study abroad program may disburse loan proceeds in a single installment to the student, 
regardless of the length of the student’s period of enrollment.155 Such an IHE is also not required 
to delay disbursement of a Direct Loan for 30 days for any first-time, first-year undergraduate 
borrowers who are studying abroad.156 While IHEs that are undergoing a change in ownership 
that results in a change in control or a change in status are generally required to implement a 
default management plan, such IHEs are exempt from this requirement if they do not have a CDR 
greater than 10% or if the new owner does not own and has not owned another IHE that had a 
CDR of greater than 10% during the owner’s tenure.157 
Disclosure and Reporting Requirements 
IHEs are not required to publicly disclose their CDRs. ED, however, is required to publish by 
September 30 of each year a report showing default data for each institution for which a CDR is 
calculated.158 The HEA also requires the Secretary of Education to publicly disclose on its 
College Navigator website159 each IHE’s CDR.160  
Application of CDRs: IHEs That Have Lost Eligibility to Participate 
in HEA Title IV Programs Due to High CDRs 
The CDR is the primary federal institutional accountability mechanism tied to the performance of 
federal student loans. One of the assumptions underlying the CDR is that high a CDR may be an 
indication of an IHE’s poor educational quality or poor administrative capability.161 This section 
explores historical and current institutional performance under the CDR metric. Specifically, it 
 
152 HEA §428G(a)(3) and (4). Typically, loans for these periods are required to be made in two or more disbursements. 
153 HEA §428G(b)(1) and (3). Typically, IHEs must delay Direct Loan disbursements to first-time, first-year 
undergraduate borrowers for 30 days following the beginning of the student’s course of study. 
154 A home institution is the school at which a student is enrolled in a degree or certificate program. For study abroad 
program purposes, students temporarily fulfill part of their program requirements at a foreign school. 
155 A period of enrollment (or loan period) is the period for which a federal student loan is intended; 34 C.F.R. 
§685.102(b). 
156 HEA §428G(e). 
157 HEA §487(a)(14)(C). 
158 HEA §435(n)(4)(C). For additional information, see U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, 
“Official Cohort Default Rates for Schools,” https://fsapartners.ed.gov/knowledge-center/topics/default-management/
official-cohort-default-rates-schools. 
159 Through the College Navigator website, ED makes publicly available a variety of consumer information about 
IHEs; U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, “College Navigator,” 
https://nces.ed.gov/collegenavigator/. 
160 HEA §132(i)(1)(T). HEA Section 435(m)(4) requires ED to publish a report annually showing cohort default data 
and life of cohort default rates for IHEs by sector (e.g., four-year public institutions, two-year proprietary institutions). 
For purposes of this publication requirement, the data are to reflect the percentage of borrowers who borrowed 
Subsidized Loans, Unsubsidized Loans, or PLUS Loans (or Consolidation Loans used to repay such loans) for 
attendance at an institution who entered repayment in a given fiscal year and defaulted on those loans before the end of 
each succeeding fiscal year. 
161 Currently, HEA Title IV administrative capability requirements focus on an IHE’s processes, procedures, and 
personnel used in administering Title IV funds and indicators of student success. HEA §498(d); 34 C.F.R. §668.16. 
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explores the national CDR for CFY1987-CFY2020 and institutional CDRs for CFY2015-
CFY2017. While institutional CDRs for CFY2018, CFY2019, and CFY2020 are available, they 
are generally excluded in the analysis presented in this section because they reflect years in which 
the COVID-19 student loan payment pause was in effect, which made it significantly less likely 
for most borrowers to default on their student loans. As such, those years’ CDRs are lower than 
they might otherwise have been in the absence of that policy and may not provide sufficient 
insight into institutional performance under the CDR metric in more typical circumstances. 
National CDR 
Each year, ED calculates the national CDR, which is a single CDR for all IHEs in a given cohort 
fiscal year. Figure 1 presents the national CDR for CFY1987 through CFY2020. For CFY1987-
CFY2011, it presents the two-year CDR.162 For CFY2009-CFY2020, it presents the three-year 
CDR.163 Figure 1 shows that nationally, two-year CDRs peaked in CFY1990 at 22.4%, and after 
that declined fairly consistently until reaching a then-low of 4.5% in CFY2003.164 In the final 
years of use, two-year CDRs increased somewhat before being replaced with three-year CDRs. 
Under the three-year CDR measure, the national CDR peaked relatively early (14.7% in FY2010) 
and has slowly decreased since then to 9.7% in CFY2017. The CFY2018, CFY2019, and 
CFY2020 CDRs reflect years in which the COVID-19 student loan payment pause was in effect; 
thus, those years’ CDRs are lower than they might otherwise have been in the absence of that 
policy.  
 
162 ED sanctioned IHEs for having three consecutive years’ worth of two-year CDRs that exceeded the applicable 
threshold through CFY2010. Requirements for IHEs to meet specified CDR metrics were not in place for CFY1987-
CFY1988. For CFY1989-CFY1993, various CDR thresholds were used to determine institutional Title IV program 
eligibility. For CFY1994-CFY2010, statute specified that an IHE could lose Title IV eligibility if its CDR equaled or 
exceeded 25% in three consecutive fiscal years. That is, if an IHE’s CDR equaled or exceeded 25% for CFY2008, 
CFY2009, and CFY2010 or any three consecutive cohort fiscal years thereafter, the IHE could lose Title IV eligibility. 
163 ED calculated three-year CDRs for CFY2009 and CFY2010, but IHEs were not subject to CDR sanctions based on 
those calculations until CFY2011. For CFY2011 to the present, statute specifies that an IHE may lose Title IV 
eligibility if its CDR equals or exceeds 30% in three consecutive fiscal years. That is, if an IHE’s CDR equaled or 
exceeded 30% for CFY2009, CFY2010, and CFY20111 or any three consecutive cohort fiscal years thereafter, the IHE 
may lose Title IV eligibility. 
164 ED has suggested a number of potential reasons for the decrease in the national CDR from CFY1990 to CFY2003, 
including (1) the loss of Title IV eligibility and subsequent closure of many IHEs with chronically high CDRs in the 
early 1990s, (2) ED’s efforts to provide IHEs with default prevention training, (3) enactment of legislation in 1998 that 
increased the length of time for a loan to default, and (4) an increase in borrowers consolidating their loans while in 
school (an option that was eliminated in 2006). U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Federal Student 
Loans: Actions Needed to Improve Oversight of Schools’ Default Rates, GAO-18-163, April 26, 2018, p. 11, 
https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-18-163.pdf. 
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Cohort Default Rates and HEA Title IV Eligibility: Background and Analysis 
 
Figure 1. National Cohort Default Rates 
CFY1987-CFY2020 
 
Source: U.S. Department of Education, FY2024 Congressional Budget Justification, “Student Loans Overview,” 
p. 34; and U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, “National Default Rate Briefing for 
FY2020 Official Cohort Default Rules,” electronic announcement (LOANS-23-10), September 29, 2023. 
Notes: The two-year CDR was used to determine institutional Title IV eligibility for CFY1989-CFY2010; for 
CFY2011-CFY2020, the three-year CDR was used to determine institutional Title IV eligibility.  
Recent Institutional CDRs 
Of the 5,278 domestic IHEs that participated in the HEA Title IV programs in academic year 
(AY) 2020-2021,165 4,397 had official CDRs issued for CFY2017166 and 881 IHEs did not, either 
because (1) they had fewer than 30 borrowers entering repayment in CFY2017167 and did not also 
 
165 IHEs participating in the Title IV programs in AY2020-2021 (July 1, 2020-June 30, 2021) comprise the universe of 
IHEs most closely aligned with the time the CFY2017 CDRs were issued (September 2020). This figure excludes IHEs 
that newly became eligible to participate in the Title IV programs during the data collection year and those that stopped 
participating in the Title IV programs during the data collection year. U.S. Department of Education, National Center 
for Education Statistics, Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System. 
166 For CFY2017, 344 foreign IHEs were issued CDRs. Foreign IHEs were excluded from this analysis because they do 
not report to the National Center for Education Statistics’ Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System, which was 
used to aggregate data for this analysis. U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Official Cohort 
Default Rate for Schools, press package for FY2017, https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-09/
FY2017PressPackage.xlsx. 
167 While institutional CDRs for CFY2018, CFY2019, and CFY2020 are available, they are excluded from this analysis 
(continued...) 
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have an official or unofficial CDR for either or both of the two previous fiscal years (125 IHEs)168 
or (2) they did not have data necessary to calculate a CDR for the given cohort fiscal year (756 
IHEs).169 These latter IHEs, therefore, were not subject to sanctions for high CDRs and did not 
receive benefits for low CDRs (e.g., exemption from specified Title IV administrative 
requirements). As such, it is estimated that approximately 16% of domestic IHEs participating in 
the Title IV programs in AY2020-2021 were not subject to CDR requirements at that time. Those 
IHEs that were not subject to CDR requirements accounted for approximately 3% of total student 
enrollment at domestic Title IV participating IHEs in AY2020-2021.170 Thus, while a sizeable 
share of Title IV participating IHEs may not be subject to CDR requirements in a given year, the 
CDR metrics capture IHEs enrolling the majority of postsecondary students. 
IHEs Subject to CDR Sanctions and Appeal Outcomes  
Early in the use of CDRs as an institutional accountability metric, high numbers of IHEs were 
subject to CDR sanctions. Over time, this number has fallen substantially. For example, GAO 
reported that from 1992 to 1999, 1,846 IHEs were subject to immediate loss of eligibility, 
suspension, or termination from the Title IV programs due to high CDRs. From 2000 to 2008, 
four IHEs were subject to such sanctions.171 The latter trend continues in more recent periods. 
Table 1 depicts the number of IHEs that had official CDRs calculated in CFY2015, CFY2016, or 
CFY2017, and of those, the number of IHEs (1) with their most recent CDR equaling 40% or 
greater in a single cohort fiscal year, (2) with three consecutive years’ worth of CDRs equaling 
30% or greater, (3) subject to CDR sanctions172 due to meeting the aforementioned thresholds, 
and (4) ultimately referred for Title IV sanctions (i.e., loss of Direct Loan and/or Pell Grant 
program eligibility).173 The table illustrates that, all told, a small portion (about 0.04%) of IHEs 
with official CDRs were subject to Title IV sanctions in any given year examined.174 This appears 
to be largely driven by the fact that few IHEs (0.30%-0.60%) met one of the aforementioned 
CDR thresholds. For those IHEs that did meet one of the thresholds, a relatively small percentage 
 
because they reflect years in which the COVID-19 student loan payment pause was in effect, which made it 
significantly less likely for most borrowers to default on their student loans. As such, those years’ CDRs are lower than 
they might otherwise have been in the absence of that policy and may not provide sufficient insight into institutional 
performance under the CDR metric in more typical circumstances. 
168 Special tabulation of data provided to CRS by the U.S. Department of Education, July 13, 2022. Such an IHE would 
have an unofficial CDR calculated using the non-average rate and current-year data; ED, CDR Guide, p. 2.1-5. 
169 The latter may occur, for example, if an IHE does not or has not participated in the Title IV student loan programs. 
170 Calculations by CRS using U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Integrated 
Postsecondary Education Data System. 
171 U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Proprietary Schools: Stronger Department of Education Oversight 
Needed to Help Ensure Only Eligible Students Receive Federal Student Aid, GAO-09-600, August 2009, p. 11, 
https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-09-600.pdf. 
172 An IHE is subject to sanctions when it meets one of the above-described thresholds and ED does not 
administratively determine that it meets criteria for an average rate appeal or a 30-or-fewer borrowers appeal. 
173 An IHE is referred for sanctions if it does not successfully appeal the application of any potential sanctions to it or 
the data underlying the CDR are not adjusted to bring the IHE’s CDR(s) within the threshold. In some instances, 
although ED may determine that an IHE should be sanctioned for failure to meet CDR requirements, the IHE may close 
or voluntarily withdraw from participating in the Title IV programs before the ED sanction is effectuated. 
174 GAO previously issued a report that presented data on IHEs subject to CDR sanctions and appeals outcomes. The 
data in that report differ from those presented here, as GAO presented data based on the fiscal year in which IHEs were 
subject to a sanction (i.e., the year in which official CDRs were released), whereas the data presented in this report are 
based on the cohort fiscal year for which the CDR measure was calculated. See U.S. Government Accountability Office 
(GAO), Federal Student Loans: Actions Needed to Improve Oversight of Schools’ Default Rates, GAO-18-163, April 
26, 2018, p. 30, https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-18-163.pdf. 
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(7%-10%) were ultimately referred for Title IV sanctions due to the availability of a number of 
adjustments and appeals.175 
Table 1. IHEs Subject to CDR Sanctions and Those Referred for Sanctions 
CFY2015, CFY2016, and CFY2017 
 
 
IHEs Meeting or Exceeding CDR Thresholds 
 
 
Official CDR ≥ 
Official CDR 
40% and 
IHEs 
≥ 30% for 
Official CDR ≥ 
IHEs 
IHEs 
with 
Official 
Three 
30% for Three 
Subject 
Referred 
Official 
CDR ≥ 
Consecutive 
Consecutive 
Unique 
to CDR 
for 
CFY 
CDRs 
40% 
CFYs 
CFYs 
IHEs 
Sanctions 
Sanctions 
CFY2015 
4,873 
9 
13 
3 
19 
12 
2 
CFY2016 
4,811 
19 
17 
7 
29 
14 
2 
CFY2017 
4,796 
19 
23 
13 
29 
12 
2 
Source: U.S. Department of Education, Official Cohort Default Rates for Schools, press packages for FY2017, 
FY2016, and FY2015; and special tabulation of data provided to CRS by the U.S. Department of Education, July 
13, 2022. 
Possible Explanations for Why CDRs Are No Longer Screening Out 
Many IHEs 
In addition to explicit rules for calculating CDRs, a variety of other factors might help explain 
why CDRs are no longer screening out as many IHEs from Title IV participation compared to 
previous years. These factors relate to how IHEs have responded to the existence of the CDR and 
student loan repayment flexibilities provided to borrowers to help address difficulties they may 
face in repaying their loans.  
Institutional Responses to the CDR 
The CDR was initially devised as an institutional accountability metric intended to address high 
incidence of default in the federal student loan programs. At the time of its creation and 
throughout its history, one assumption underlying the CDR was that if an IHE was of sufficient 
quality, it would provide students with the skills to enable them to stay out of default on their 
loans. To that end, many poorly performing (i.e., high borrower default) IHEs were eliminated 
from HEA Title IV participation early on in the CDR’s usage.176 It is possible that as a result of 
this culling, high numbers of poorly performing institutions were removed and are no longer in 
operation and/or no longer participate in the HEA Title IV programs.  
The CDR may also be performing a preventative role in that it may be encouraging IHEs to avoid 
unwanted behavior in the first place. The fact that few IHEs have faced sanctions in recent years 
could be viewed as evidence of the CDR’s effectiveness in this respect, assuming that in the 
metric’s absence some IHEs might have higher default rates.  
 
175 In more recent years, Congress has taken action to waive the application of specific appeals requirements to enable 
some IHEs that would have otherwise been sanctioned due to high CDRs. See Appendix B. 
176 U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Proprietary Schools: Stronger Department of Education Oversight 
Needed to Help Ensure Only Eligible Students Receive Federal Student Aid, GAO-09-600, August 2009, p. 11, 
https://www.gao.gov/assets/gao-09-600.pdf. 
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Relatedly, IHEs may have become more adept at navigating CDR requirements and may have 
adopted practices to help ensure their compliance with the CDR. Some of these practices may be 
viewed as positive for borrowers, while others may be viewed as negative. For example, 
borrower-positive strategies have included creating programs to educate borrowers about student 
loans and to improve financial literacy, updating student aid packaging practices to minimize 
student loan borrowing, and providing more robust student support services to help increase 
student retention and thus decrease the potential for default.177 On the other hand, some 
stakeholders178 have alleged, and at least one government report has found, that some IHEs 
engage in practices to encourage borrowers to use forbearance options specifically to aid the IHEs 
in meeting their CDR requirements, regardless of whether forbearance is the most beneficial 
option to the borrower179 (see the “Deferment and Forbearance” section).  
Student Loan Repayment Flexibilities 
Although the CDR framework has evolved over the years to address some issues or changes in 
the federal student aid landscape, it has not evolved to account for other developments, most 
notably the expansion of student loan repayment flexibilities that may help address difficulties 
borrowers might face in repaying their loans and aid them in avoiding default. 
Income-Driven Repayment Plans 
Since the inception of the HEA student loan programs, borrowers have had the opportunity to 
repay their loans according to a standard repayment plan under which they make fixed monthly 
payments for a maximum of 10 years. Congress and ED have occasionally authorized or created 
additional loan repayment plan options, often in response to perceived issues borrowers were 
facing in repaying their student loans. For example, in the late 1980s as part of a series of steps to 
address the high incidents of default, HEA amendments authorized borrowers to make payments 
according to a graduated repayment plan or an income-sensitive repayment plan. Each of these 
plans enabled borrowers to potentially make at least some payments in amounts lower than what 
they would have made under a standard repayment plan with a maximum 10-year repayment 
term. 
Today, federal student loan borrowers may choose from among numerous loan repayment plans, 
including several income-driven repayment (IDR) plans.180 Under these plans, borrowers make 
monthly payments in amounts that are capped at a specified share (e.g., 5%, 10%, 15%, or 20% 
 
177 Erin Dillon and Robin V. Smiles, Lowering Student Loan Default Rates: What One Consortium of Historically 
Black Institutions Did to Succeed, Education Sector, February 2010. 
178 See, for example, Pauline Abernathy, Lauren Asher, and Diane Cheng et al., Aligning the Means and the Ends: How 
to Improve Federal Student Aid and Increase College Access and Success, The Institute for College Access and 
Success, February 2013, pp. 23-24. 
179 U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Federal Student Loans: Actions Needed to Improve Oversight of 
Schools’ Default Rates, GAO-18-163, April 26, 2018, pp. 14-26. 
180 The IDR plans that are currently available to borrowers are the Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) plan, the 
Income-Based Repayment (IBR) plan (one version of which is available to individuals who qualify as a new borrower 
on or after July 1, 2014, and another that is available to individuals who do not qualify as a new borrower as of that 
date), the Pay As You Earn (PAYE) repayment plan, and the Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE) repayment plan. On 
July 10, 2023, ED published a Final Rule that amends REPAYE plan provisions and refers to the updated plan as the 
Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan. Some elements of the SAVE plan were effective July 30, 2023, while 
others are to be effective July 1, 2024. In addition, effective July 1, 2024, new enrollment in the PAYE plan would be 
prohibited; new enrollment the IBR plan would be limited to borrowers who have a partial financial hardship and have 
not made more than 60 qualifying payments on the SAVE plan after July 1, 2024; and new enrollment in the ICR plan 
would be limited to borrowers of Direct Consolidation Loans made on or after July 1, 2006, that repaid a Parent PLUS 
Loan. 
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Cohort Default Rates and HEA Title IV Eligibility: Background and Analysis 
 
depending on the plan) of their discretionary income,181 and it is possible for a borrower’s 
monthly payment to equal $0.182After making payments for a specified period of time (e.g., 10, 
20, or 25 years, depending on the plan), a borrower’s remaining loan balance is forgiven. One 
type of IDR plan, the Income-Contingent Repayment plan, has been available to borrowers since 
1994, but beginning in 2007 several other more generous types of IDR plans have been made 
available via congressional and administrative action. Most recently, ED published a Final Rule 
that amends one type of IDR plan, the Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE) repayment plan. (The 
Final Rule also refers to the amended plan as the Saving on a Valuable Education [SAVE] plan.) 
The changes are intended to, among other purposes, help “more borrowers avert delinquency and 
default”183 by lowering all qualifying borrowers’ monthly payments and decreasing the maximum 
repayment period required for loan forgiveness in some cases. The amended regulations would 
also automatically enroll certain borrowers in an IDR plan after 75 days of nonpayment on their 
loan(s). 
In recent years, borrower enrollment in these plans has grown markedly. For example, about 10% 
of Direct Loan program recipients were enrolled in an IDR plan as of June 30, 2013, compared to 
32% of such recipients as of June 30, 2023.184 
Research conducted by CBO indicates that borrowers enrolled in an IDR plan default on their 
loans at lower rates than borrowers enrolled in other repayment plans.185 Additionally, ED’s 
recent regulatory changes may make it less likely for some borrowers to default on their loans.186 
For example, under the changes, some borrowers may be placed into an IDR plan after 75 days of 
nonpayment, well before the 360 days of nonpayment after which a borrower is considered in 
default on their loans. Thus, as borrower enrollment in IDR plans increases, institutional CDRs 
may be likely to decrease. 
While at least one type of IDR plan has been available to borrowers since the early use of CDRs 
as an institutional accountability metric, the recent expansion of and increased borrower take-up 
of IDR plans may have a bearing on whether the CDR is viewed as a sufficient institutional 
accountability metric moving forward. Some stakeholders have pointed out that enrollment in an 
IDR plan is considered a “good outcome” under the CDR metrics, in that borrowers have not 
defaulted on their loans, even if the borrowers might otherwise struggle to pay down their loans 
(e.g., based on their monthly income, they make low monthly payments, sometimes equal to 
 
181 Discretionary income is defined as the portion of a borrower’s adjusted gross income that is in excess of a specified 
multiple of the federal poverty guidelines applicable to the borrower’s family size. 
182 For additional information on IDR plans, see CRS Report R45931, Federal Student Loans Made Through the 
William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program: Terms and Conditions for Borrowers. 
183 U.S. Department of Education, “Improving Income Driven Repayment for the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan 
Program and the Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) Program,” 88 Federal Register 43820, July 10, 2023. 
184 In general, all of a borrower’s Direct Loan program loans must be repaid together according to the same repayment 
plan. However, if a borrower seeking to repay according to one of the IDR plans has some types of loans that may be 
repaid according to an IDR plan and others that may not, the borrower may repay the eligible loans according to an 
IDR plan and the ineligible loans according to a non-IDR plan; 34 C.F.R. §685.208(a)(4). ED data do not provide 
unduplicated headcounts of borrowers by repayment plan; thus, some borrowers may be counted more than once in this 
calculation; CRS analysis of U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Student Aid Data Center, 
“Portfolio by Repayment Plan (DL, ED-Held FFEL, ED-Owned),” https://studentaid.gov/data-center/student/portfolio. 
185 See, for example, Congressional Budget Office (CBO), Income-Driven Repayment Plans for Student Loans: 
Budgetary Costs and Policy Options, February 2020, https://www.cbo.gov/publication/56277#_idTextAnchor025. 
186 For additional discussion of how ED’s recent regulatory changes may affect CDRs, see U.S. Department of 
Education, “Improving Income Driven Repayment for the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program and the 
Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) Program,” 88 Federal Register 43862, 43876, July 10, 2023. 
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$0).187 That said, if the intent of the CDR is to gauge institutional quality based on borrowers’ 
ability to repay their loans, the increasingly prevalent use of IDR plans may lessen the measure’s 
effectiveness.188  
Deferment and Forbearance 
Deferment and forbearance provide borrowers with temporary relief from the obligation to make 
monthly payments that would otherwise be due on their loans, and they have been available in 
some form to borrowers throughout the federal student loan programs’ history.189 Currently, 
deferment or forbearance may be available to borrowers in a variety of circumstances such as 
while a borrower is experiencing economic hardship or temporary hardship, is unemployed or 
employed less than full-time while seeking full-time employment, or is engaged in specified types 
of service (e.g., AmeriCorps, military). Unless an interest subsidy applies to a borrower’s loans,190 
interest continues to accrue during periods of deferment and forbearance; thus, during these 
periods, a borrower’s loan balance may increase. 
Borrowers in deferment or forbearance are considered current on their loans for purposes of 
calculating an IHE’s CDR. That is, borrowers in deferment or forbearance at the time an IHE’s 
CDR is calculated would be included in the denominator of the CDR but not the numerator. Even 
if a borrower is not in deferment or forbearance at the time an IHE’s CDR is calculated, a 
borrower’s use of these options prior to the calculation date may push a subsequent default 
outside of the cohort default period. These uses of deferment or forbearance would result in a 
decrease in an IHE’s CDR for a given cohort fiscal year. 
As with IDR plans, the availability of deferment and forbearance options to borrowers may dilute 
the utility of the CDR as an institutional accountability metric. As previously described, in 2003 
when a two-year cohort default period was still in use, ED’s OIG asserted that CDRs did not 
provide decisionmakers with sufficient information on Title IV student loan defaults. Among 
other findings, OIG found that borrowers in deferment or forbearance materially lowered IHEs’ 
CDRs, but rates of default increased in the year immediately following the two-year cohort 
default period.191 These findings indicated that while borrowers were able to remain out of default 
for a short period of time after entering repayment, they had less success in staying out of default 
in the longer term. HEA amendments subsequently updated the two-year cohort default period to 
a three-year cohort default period, which would presumably weaken the effects of deferment and 
forbearance on CDRs, as the three-year timeframe would capture a longer period of borrower 
repayment activity. 
 
187 See, for example, Michael Itzkowitz, Why the Cohort Default Rate is Insufficient, Third Way, November 7, 2017, 
https://www.thirdway.org/report/why-the-cohort-default-rate-is-insufficient. 
188 Owen Daugherty, Your Thoughts: Cohort Default Rates Don't Tell the Whole Story, National Association of Student 
Financial Aid Administrators, December 19, 2020, https://www.nasfaa.org/news-item/23635/
Your_Thoughts_Cohort_Default_Rates_Don_t_Tell_the_Whole_Story. 
189 For additional information on deferment and forbearance, see CRS Report R45931, Federal Student Loans Made 
Through the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program: Terms and Conditions for Borrowers. 
190 Typically, an interest subsidy applies to a borrower’s Subsidized Loans (or the portion of a borrower’s 
Consolidation Loan used to repay a Subsidized Loan) during periods of deferment. In addition, for a period of up to 60 
months, an interest subsidy applies to a borrower’s Subsidized Loans, Unsubsidized Loans, PLUS Loans, and 
Consolidation Loans (to the extent the underlying loans were first disbursed on or after October 1, 2008) disbursed on 
or after October 1, 2008, while the borrower is serving on active duty in the Armed Forces or is performing qualifying 
National Guard duty in an area of hostilities during a war or national emergency.  
191 U.S. Department of Education, Office of Inspector General, Audit to Determine in Cohort Default Rates Provide 
Sufficient Information on Defaults in the Title IV Loan Programs, ED-OIG/A03-C0017, December 22, 2003, pp. 9 
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Since the HEA amendments that updated the two-year cohort default period to a three-year cohort 
default period, some stakeholders192 have alleged, and at least one government report has found, 
that some IHEs engage in practices to encourage borrowers to use forbearance options 
specifically to aid the IHEs in meeting their CDR requirements, regardless of whether 
forbearance is the most beneficial option to the borrower. In 2018, GAO found that some IHEs 
and their default-management consultants193 encouraged borrowers with delinquent loans to 
postpone future payments through forbearance, even though the use of forbearance may increase 
a borrower’s total loan costs and may not be as beneficial to borrowers as other options such as 
enrollment in certain repayment plans.194 
Similar to the IDR plans, while a borrower’s use of deferment or forbearance may be considered 
a positive outcome under the CDR metrics in that borrowers have not defaulted on their loans, 
their treatment under the CDR metrics does not necessarily reflect the potential that borrowers 
using these options may otherwise be struggling to make payments on their loans. This issue may 
be exacerbated by institutional practices to encourage borrowers to use deferment and 
forbearance in pursuit of lower CDRs.  
COVID-19 Related Flexibilities 
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, Congress and ED have taken a number of steps to 
provide relief and repayment flexibilities to federal student loan borrowers.195 Some of these have 
had a material impact on CDRs while others may have a potentially smaller effect on them. 
Payment Pause 
From March 2020 to October 2023, most federal student loans196 were in a special administrative 
forbearance (commonly referred to as a payment pause) to help address potential negative 
financial effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on borrowers. During this time, most borrowers 
were not required to make payments on their loans. ED announced that following the end of the 
payment pause,197 a 12-month “on-ramp” to repayment would be available for borrowers. Under 
this policy, from October 1, 2023, to September 30, 2024, borrowers who miss monthly payments 
will not be considered delinquent on their loans and will not be placed into default.198 As with the 
deferment and forbearance periods described above, during the payment pause borrowers were 
 
192 See, for example, Pauline Abernathy, Lauren Asher, and Diane Cheng et al., Aligning the Means and the Ends: How 
to Improve Federal Student Aid and Increase College Access and Success, The Institute for College Access and 
Success, February 2013, pp. 23-24. 
193 Some IHEs hire third-party default management consultants to help manage their default rates. IHEs may also work 
directly with their student borrowers to prevent them from defaulting on their loans. 
194 U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Federal Student Loans: Actions Needed to Improve Oversight of 
Schools’ Default Rates, GAO-18-163, April 26, 2018, pp. 14-26. 
195 For information on this relief and repayment flexibilities, including options not discussed in this report, see CRS 
Report R46314, Federal Student Loan Debt Relief in the Context of COVID-19. 
196 These include all federal student loans held by ED, including all Direct Loan program loans.  
197 See the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023 (P.L. 118-5) and ED, Office of Federal Student Aid, “COVID-19 Loan 
Payment Pause and 0% Interest,” https://studentaid.gov/announcements-events/covid-19/payment-pause-zero-interest 
(accessed June 22, 2023). For additional information on the payment pause and the policy, see CRS Report R46314, 
Federal Student Loan Debt Relief in the Context of COVID-19. 
198 U.S. Department of Education, “FACT SHEET: President Biden Announces New Actions to Provide Debt Relief 
and Support for Student Loan Borrowers,” press release, June 30, 2023, https://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/fact-
sheet-president-biden-announces-new-actions-provide-debt-relief-and-support-student-loan-borrowers. 
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considered current on their loans and could not default. It appears the same would be true during 
the on-ramp period.  
The effects of these policies are currently being realized. For example, the CFY2020 CDR was 
0.0% and ED has stated that the institutional CDRs for CFY2020 “were significantly impacted by 
the pause on federal student loan payments.” Table 2 presents the national CDR for CFY2017-
CFY2020. It shows that in CFY2017, the cohort fiscal year just prior to the COVID-19 payment 
pause being implemented, the national CDR was 9.7%. As the COVID-19 payment pause 
progressed and more months of a cohort default period encompassed the payment pause, the 
national CDR decreased, eventually to 0.0% in CFY2020. 
Table 2. National Cohort Default Rates 
CFY2017-CFY2020 
CFY2017 
CFY2018 
CFY2019 
CFY2020 
9.7% 
7.3% 
2.3% 
0.0% 
Source: U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, “National Default Rate Briefing for FY 
2020 Official Cohort Default Rules,” electronic announcement (LOANS-23-10), September 29, 2023, 
https://fsapartners.ed.gov/knowledge-center/library/electronic-announcements/2023-09-29/national-default-rate-
briefing-fy-2020-official-cohort-default-rates. 
Notes: The CFY2017 CDR did not encompass any period during which the COVID-19 payment pause was in 
effect, the CFY2018 CDR encompassed approximately six months during which the COVID-19 payment pause 
was in effect, the CFY2019 CDR encompassed approximately 1.5 years during which the COVID-19 payment 
pause was in effect, and the CFY2020 CDR encompassed approximately 2.5 years during which the COVID-19 
payment pause was in effect. 
Assuming that borrowers effectively will be unable to be considered delinquent on their loans 
until October 1, 2024, and they would be unable to default on their loans until at least late 
September 2025, institutional CDRs would be impacted through CFY2024 (released by ED in 
September 2027). Moreover, the payment pause and on-ramp policy would presumably impact 
IHEs’ ability to experience certain CDR penalties or benefits through the September 2029 CDR 
determinations (i.e., the final cycle in which CFY2024 CDRs will be used to determine CDR 
sanctions and benefits). 
Loan Rehabilitation 
If a borrower rehabilitates their loan prior to the end of the cohort default period, the borrower is 
excluded from the numerator of an IHE’s CDR. In general, to rehabilitate a loan a borrower must, 
within a 10-month period, voluntarily make nine reasonable and affordable monthly payments on 
their defaulted loan within 20 days of the due date.199 Monthly payments suspended under the 
COVID-19 payment pause count toward the nine monthly payments required to rehabilitate a 
loan, so long as those paused payments occurred after a borrower entered into a rehabilitation 
agreement with ED.200 This flexibility may enable some defaulted borrowers who would not have 
otherwise rehabilitated their loan before the end of the cohort default period to do so; thus, they 
would be excluded from the numerator of an IHE’s CDR. This flexibility is likely to impact 
CDRs to a significantly lesser degree than the payment pause.201 
 
199 HEA §§428F(a) and 435(m)(2)(C); 34 C.F.R. §§682.405(a)(2) and 685.211(f). 
200 U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, “COVID-19 Relief: Loans in 
Default,” https://studentaid.gov/announcements-events/covid-19/default (accessed November 3, 2022). 
201 In spring 2021, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, ED announced the transfer of some GA-held FFEL 
(continued...) 
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Loan Cancellation 
On June 30, 2023, the Biden Administration announced that it intends to undergo the rulemaking 
process to provide “debt relief to as many working and middle-class borrowers as possible.”202 
The scope of the policy has not yet been fully defined203; however, were it to broadly cancel at 
least some student loan debt, it could have the potential to reduce the number of defaults that 
would otherwise occur. This, in turn, could have the potential to make some IHEs’ CDRs lower 
than they would be in the absence of the policy. Some IHEs that might have otherwise failed to 
meet CDR thresholds may satisfy them, and some IHEs that would not have otherwise been 
eligible for benefits associated with low CDRs may become eligible.  
CDR Distribution Within and Across Institutional 
Sectors 
A primary criticism of the CDR rules, as currently constructed and applied, is that IHEs rarely fail 
the CDR metrics, and when they do, they are rarely sanctioned for it (see Table 1).204 These 
outcomes have led some to question whether the current CDR framework is a sufficient 
institutional accountability metric.205  
This section of the report examines more closely institutional performance under the current CDR 
methodology, with a focus on performance within and across institutional sectors. In doing so, 
CRS analyzes general institutional performance trends under the current CDR methodology but 
does not suggest any particular performance threshold for consideration. CRS explores a single 
year’s worth of CDRs (as opposed to examining institutional performance over three consecutive 
 
program loans that had defaulted on or after March 13, 2020, to ED and the placement of such loans in good standing. 
Such borrowers with active rehabilitation agreements could then have monthly payments suspended under the COVID-
19 payment pause count toward the nine monthly payments required to rehabilitate a loan. This action could potentially 
result in some borrowers in a given cohort fiscal year rehabilitating their loans within the applicable cohort default 
period and, thus, being excluded from an IHE’s CDR numerator. ED has stated the impact of such borrowers on 
institutional CDRs “should be virtually undetectable,” as the proportion of Direct Loan borrowers who entered 
repayment during the relevant cohort fiscal years is much higher.  
Also in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, in April 2022 ED announced its Fresh Start initiative, under which 
certain eligible borrowers who defaulted on their loans prior to March 20, 2020, are to be given the opportunity to bring 
their loans out of default using streamlined procedures. The cohort fiscal years and cohort default periods that could be 
affected by borrowers participating in this initiative lapsed prior to ED announcing the initiative. Thus, borrowers’ 
participation in the Fresh Start initiative would not have an effect on CDRs. 
CRS email communication with ED, November 16, 2022. 
202 U.S. Department of Education, “FACT SHEET: President Biden Announces New Actions to Provide Debt Relief 
and Support for Student Loan Borrowers,” press release, June 30, 2023, https://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/fact-
sheet-president-biden-announces-new-actions-provide-debt-relief-and-support-student-loan-borrowers. 
203 This announcement was made in response to the Supreme Court’s June 30, 2023, ruling precluding the 
Administration from implementing a previously announced broad-based student loan debt relief policy that would have 
made available to millions of qualifying borrowers up to $10,000 or $20,000 of loan cancellation benefits per borrower. 
For additional information on the policy, see CRS Insight IN11997, The Biden Administration’s One-Time Student 
Loan Debt Relief Policy under the HEROES Act of 2003. 
204 See, for example, Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor & Pensions, Chairman Lamar Alexander, “Risk-
Sharing/Skin-in-the-Game Concepts and Proposals,” March 23, 2015, https://www.help.senate.gov/imo/media/
Risk_Sharing.pdf.  
205 See, for example, U.S. Congress, House Committee on Education and the Workforce, Promoting Real Opportunity, 
Success, and Prosperity through Education Reform Act, report to accompany H.R. 4508, 115th Cong., 2nd sess., 
February 8, 2018, H.Rept. 115-550 (Washington, DC: GPO, 2018), p. 205; and Third Way, Why the Cohort Default 
Rate is Insufficient, November 7, 2017, https://www.thirdway.org/report/why-the-cohort-default-rate-is-insufficient. 
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years, commensurate with some aspects of the current CDR framework) because many current 
CDR benefits and sanctions are based on a single year’s worth of CDRs, and for simplicity. In 
exploring institutional performance, the percentage of undergraduate students who received a Pell 
Grant for enrollment206 at an IHE207 and status as an HBCU are also considered because they have 
been of interest to stakeholders when considering institutional performance under the CDR 
framework.208  
In total, CRS examined institutional characteristics of 4,373 IHEs. This universe of schools 
included all domestic IHEs with official CDRs for CFY2017 and institutional characteristics data 
reported to ED’s Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS) for the relevant year. 
For measures of the percentage of an IHE’s enrolled undergraduates who received a Pell Grant, 
CRS excluded those schools that reported zero individuals enrolled as undergraduate students for 
the relevant year. For a full description of CRS’s methodology for this analysis, see Appendix B. 
Institutional Performance  
Overall, few IHEs (about 1%) had CDRs that equaled or exceeded 30% for CFY2017; these IHEs 
enrolled an even smaller percentage (0.1%) of all students (see Table A-1). About 3% of IHEs 
had CDRs approaching the threshold, that is—equal to or greater than 25% but less than 30%—
and likewise these IHEs enrolled a small percentage (0.6%) of all students. Private for-profit less-
than-two-year IHEs made up the majority of IHEs with CDRs that equaled or exceeded 30% 
(60% of all such IHEs) and of IHEs with CDRs that approached that threshold (54% of all such 
IHEs). 
Figure 2 depicts the distribution of IHEs based on CFY2017 CDRs in one percentage point 
increments, by sector; the median CDR across all IHEs is represented by the red vertical line. The 
median CDR across all IHEs with official CDRs issued in CFY2017 was 9.0%.  
In general, private nonprofit four-year, public four-year, and private nonprofit two-year IHEs 
tended to have CDRs at or below the median across all IHEs (Figure 2). Collectively, they 
enrolled 46% (about 12 million) of all students (Table A-1).209 Public two-year institutions 
generally had CDRs greater than the median across all IHEs and enrolled 27% of all students; 
although, the large majority of public two-year IHEs with CDRs above the median had CDRs of 
greater than 9% but less than 20%—well below statutory thresholds. Private for-profit 
(proprietary) four-year IHEs were somewhat evenly dispersed between IHEs with CDRs that 
were at or below the median across all IHEs and CDRs that were greater than the median, but 
student enrollment was concentrated at IHEs with CDRs above the median.210            
 
206 Pell Grant receipt is often used as a proxy measure for low-income students. 
207 As described earlier in this report, an IHE undergoing a change in status (e.g., an IHE merges with or acquires 
another IHE) may have another school’s CDR applied to it in a given year. Thus, it is possible that for a limited number 
of IHEs examined here, the characteristics of the borrowers captured in the IHE’s CDR may not be reflective of the 
IHE’s student body composition as reported in the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS)—one of 
the data sources used by CRS in this analysis. 
208 HBCUs tend to enroll higher proportions of economically disadvantaged and first-generation students than non-
HBCUs. See, for example, Katherine M. Saunders, Krystal L. Williams, and Cheryl L. Smith, Fewer Resources, More 
Debt: Loan Debt Burdens Students at Historically Black Colleges and Universities, p. 9, UNCF, Washington, DC, 
2016. 
209 Private nonprofit four-year and public four-year institutions enrolled the vast majority (99.8%) of these students. 
210 Specifically, 70% of all students enrolled at proprietary four-year institutions were enrolled at such IHEs with CDRs 
above the median. 
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Figure 2. Distribution of IHEs Within Institutional Sectors by CFY2017 CDRs,  
Examined in Relation to Median CDR for all IHEs 
 
Source: CRS analysis of U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Official Cohort Default 
Rate for Schools, press package for FY2017, https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-09/
FY2017PressPackage.xlsx; and U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Integrated 
Postsecondary Education Data System. 
Notes: CFY2017 = cohort fiscal year 2017. The red vertical line represents the median CDR across all IHEs that 
had an official CDR for CFY2017, which equals 9%.     
When considering the percentage of undergraduate students who received a Pell Grant, overall 
those IHEs with CDRs of 25% or higher had average rates of Pell Grant receipt that were 
noticeably higher than that of all IHEs (see Table A-1).211 However, there were certain sectors 
where this trend did not hold: results were mixed regarding whether IHEs with CDRs of 25% or 
higher within specific institutional sectors had higher-than- or lower-than-average rates of Pell 
Grant receipt within the relevant sector (see Table A-1). 
 
211 For measures of the percentage of an IHE’s enrolled undergraduates who received a Pell Grant, CRS excluded those 
schools that reported zero individuals enrolled as undergraduate students for the relevant year. 
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HBCUs were more likely than non-HBCUs to have CDRs approaching or exceeding 30%. While 
HBCUs represent a small portion (2%)212 of all IHEs examined in this report, they accounted for 
11% of all IHEs meeting the 30% threshold and 9% of all IHEs with CDRs equal to or greater 
than 25% but less than 30%.213 Combined, these HBCUs enrolled 10% (about 30,000) of all 
students enrolled at HBCUs but 0.1% of students enrolled at all IHEs (Table A-1). 
Measures That Could Possibly Be Incorporated Into 
a CDR-Style Accountability Metric: Student 
Borrower Rates (SBRs) and Student Loan Dollar 
Default Rates (SLDDRs)  
The current CDR methodology may indicate the extent to which individuals who borrow certain 
federal loans to attend an institution could have difficulties avoiding default in the first years 
following their entry into repayment. However, it might not fully reflect the relative risk attending 
a certain IHE could pose to prospective students, as it does not consider the extent to which 
students who attend a particular IHE borrow.214 The relatively few borrowers who have difficulty 
remaining out of default within three years of entering repayment may not be broadly reflective 
of prospective applicants to a school. Factoring share of students borrowing could also be helpful 
in gauging the federal government’s fiscal risk.  
Incorporating a measure of the percentage of undergraduate and graduate students who borrowed 
federal student loans to attend an IHE in a given academic year (the SBR), into a CDR-style 
accountability metric may alleviate some of these issues. From the federal government’s 
perspective, incorporation of the SBR could help it assess whether certain schools with high 
student loan default rates pose a meaningful risk to it in terms of overall Title IV fiscal and 
program integrity. From an IHE’s perspective, incorporation of the SBR could serve as 
recognition that IHEs may pose varying levels of risk to students based on the extent to which 
their student populations borrow. From a student’s or prospective student’s perspective, 
incorporation of the SBR may serve as a consumer information tool, helping them asses how 
 
212 In AY2015-2016, there were 101 HBCUs. Those HBCUs not examined in this report are those that did not have 
official CDRs issued for CFY2017. 
213 CRS also examined IHEs by their status as a Tribal College or University (TCU). Only three IHEs in the universe of 
institutions examined in this report were such schools, as many TCUs either had fewer than 30 borrowers entering 
repayment in CFY2017 and did not also have an official or unofficial CDR for either or both of the two previous fiscal 
years or because they did not have data necessary to calculate a CDR for CFR2017 (e.g., they do not participate in the 
student loan programs). Their CDRs were 4%, 22%, and 38%. 
214 Current CDR rules recognize this potential dynamic to some extent with the availability of the participation rate 
index (PRI) challenge and PRI appeal for IHEs with low rates of student loan borrowing among enrolled students (34 
C.F.R. §§669.204(c) & 668.214). While the availability of the PRI challenge and PRI appeal may alleviate some 
concerns regarding the utility of the CDR measure with respect to the relative risk an IHE poses to all of its enrolled 
students and the federal government as a lender, criticisms have been raised that it is “opaque, complex, and too 
limited,” as it only applies to those IHEs that choose to use it, it allows IHEs to submit enrollment data for a timeframe 
that may be most beneficial to them, and data on IHEs that successfully submit PRI challenges and appeals are not 
readily available for current and prospective students to evaluate. Lindsay Ahlman, Debbie Cochrane, and Jessica 
Thompson, A New Approach to College Accountability: Balancing Sanctions and Rewards to Improve Student 
Outcomes, The Institute for College Access & Success, working paper, December 2016, p. 6, https://ticas.org/files/
pub_files/ticas_risk_sharing_working_paper.pdf. 
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likely it is to be necessary to borrow to attend a particular IHE and, if so, how likely it may be for 
them to default on those loans.  
Additionally, the current CDR provides only a blunt measure of an IHE’s financial risk to the 
federal government as the holder of defaulted loans. For instance, under the current CDR 
methodology, each default counts the same, regardless of whether the defaulted loan amount is 
high or low. For stakeholders (e.g., taxpayers) interested in federal financial outcomes, a measure 
that takes into account each default by dollar amount (the SLDDR) would provide more 
information about the financial risk presented by borrowers at each IHE. It may also provide 
additional information to borrowers and prospective borrowers about the relative financial risk, in 
terms of the overall amount of student loan debt owed by defaulted borrowers, of borrowing for 
enrollment at a particular school. 
An Initial Look at How SBRs and SLDDRs Align 
with CDRs Within and Across Sectors 
CDRs and Student Borrower Rates 
To examine the relationship between IHEs’ CDRs and the rate at which IHEs’ students borrow 
federal student loans, CRS constructed a student borrower rate.215 The SBR is the percentage of 
graduate and undergraduate students who borrowed a Direct Loan to attend an IHE in a given 
academic year.216 CRS then divided IHEs into four categories (quadrants) based on their relative 
performance under the CFY2017 CDR and the frequency of borrowing as measured by an 
AY2015-2016 SBR across all IHEs. The AY2015-2016 SBR represents the percentage of an 
IHE’s enrolled students who borrowed a Direct Loan for enrollment in AY2015-2016, the final 
year in which a student loan borrower captured by the CFY2017 CDR would have been enrolled. 
The four categories are the following: 
1.  High CDR/High SBR: These are IHEs with CDRs that exceeded the median 
CDR of all IHEs (9.0%) and SBRs that exceeded the median SBR of all IHEs 
(46.4%). 
2.  High CDR/Low SBR: These are IHEs with CDRs that exceeded the median 
CDR of all IHEs and SBRs that were equal to or less than the median SBR of all 
IHEs. 
3.  Low CDR/Low SBR: These are IHEs with CDRs that were equal to or less than 
the median CDR of all IHEs and SBRs that were equal to or less than the median 
SBR of all IHEs. 
4.  Low CDR/High SBR: These are IHEs with CDRs that were equal to or less than 
the median CDR of all IHEs and SBRs that exceeded the median SBR of all 
IHEs.  
 
215 For a description of CRS’s methodology for this analysis, see Appendix B. 
216 This differs from the PRI challenge and appeal methodologies in a few ways. First, it uses a standardized time frame 
for measuring student enrollment rather than one selected by the IHE. Second, under the PRI methodologies student 
enrollment includes the number of students enrolled at least half-time. Under the SBR, student enrollment includes the 
total number of students enrolled regardless of their enrollment status (i.e., it includes students enrolled at least half-
time and less-than-half-time). This may be an important distinction, as students are ineligible to borrow Direct Loan 
program loans if they are enrolled less-than-half-time. IPEDS (the data source CRS used to determine student 
enrollment) does not disaggregate student enrollment based on half-time and less-than-half-time status. For additional 
information on the methodology CRS used to construct this measure, see Appendix B. 
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Figure 3 depicts institutional performance under the above schema by sector.217 Each dot in each 
graph represents a single IHE. For each graph within the figure, the upper right quadrant depicts 
IHEs that are High CDR/High SBR; the upper left quadrant depicts High CDR/Low SBR IHEs; 
the lower left quadrant depicts Low CDR/Low SBRs IHEs; and the lower right quadrant depicts 
Low CDR/High SBR IHEs.  
Figure 3. Distribution of IHEs by CFY2017 Cohort Default Rates and AY2015-2016 
Student Borrower Rate  
By Sector 
 
Source: CRS analysis of U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Official Cohort Default 
Rate for Schools, press package for FY2017, https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-09/
FY2017PressPackage.xlsx; U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Integrated 
 
217 At least one other organization has completed an analysis to adjust IHEs’ CDRs by the percentage of enrolled 
students who borrowed. A key way in which their analysis differs from that presented here is that it did not account for 
enrolled graduate students. In addition, the organization’s analysis multiplied CDRs by the percentage of an IHE’s 
enrolled students who borrowed to create a new metric. Doing so may have certain advantages, but does not map 
institutional performance under the CDR against the student borrower rate. See Lindsay Ahlman, Debbie Cochrane, 
and Jessica Thompson, A New Approach to College Accountability: Balancing Sanctions and Rewards to Improve 
Student Outcomes, The Institute for College Access & Success, working paper, December 2016, p. 6, https://ticas.org/
files/pub_files/ticas_risk_sharing_working_paper.pdf. 
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Postsecondary Education Data System; and special tabulation of data provided to CRS by the U.S. Department of 
Education, July 13, 2022. 
Notes: The student borrower rate (SBR) is the percentage of graduate and undergraduate students who 
borrowed a Direct Loan program loan to attend an IHE in academic year AY2015-2016. The red vertical line in 
each graph represents the median AY2015-2016 SBR for all IHEs: 46.4%. The red horizontal line in each graph 
represents the median CDR across all IHEs that had an official CDR for CFY2017: 9.0%. IHEs with CDRs that 
exceeded 40% (12 IHEs) were assigned a CDR value of 40%. For privacy purposes, CRS omitted from this figure 
56 IHEs with borrower counts in AY2015-2016 that were equal to or greater than one but less than ten. The 
majority of these IHEs (39%) were private nonprofit four-year institutions, with private for-profit less-than-two-
year institutions (21%), public two-year institutions (14%), and private nonprofit two-year institutions (13%) 
fol owing. The remaining sectors each made up less than 10% of all such IHEs. The mean CDR for these IHEs 
was 8.5% (6.7% median), and their mean SBR was 9.8% (4.2% median). 
Institutional Performance  
Overall, IHEs were somewhat evenly dispersed across the quadrants, although numbers of 
students enrolled and borrowers associated with such schools were not (see Table A-2). The 
smallest percentage of students (8%) and borrowers (15%) enrolled in High CDR/High SBR 
institutions, while the largest percentage of borrowers (35%) and second largest percentage of 
students (37%) enrolled in Low CDR/Low SBR institutions.  
IHEs that are High CDR/High SBR may be of the most interest in evaluating institutional 
performance, as such IHEs presumably pose the highest risk (in terms of potential for loan 
default) for students relative to the other three categories. Private for-profit two-year, private for-
profit less-than-two-year, and public less-than-two-year institutions had the highest rates of High 
CDR/High SBR IHEs—50% (190 institutions), 46% (359 institutions), and 43% (54 institutions), 
respectively (Figure 3). Together, IHEs in these sectors occupying these quadrants accounted for 
about 2% of all enrolled students and 3% of all borrowers (Table A-2).  
Of note, a high proportion of public two-year institutions (87%) were High CDR/Low SBR, 
reflecting the fact that not many students who enrolled at these institutions borrowed but when 
they did, they were more likely to default on their loans within three years of entering repayment 
(Figure 3).  
IHEs that were High CDR/High SBR and enrolled undergraduate students in AY2015-2016218 had 
a higher average rate of Pell Grant receipt compared to IHEs in the other quadrants (Table A-1). 
The average rate of Pell Grant receipt across High CDR/High SBR IHEs equaled 58%, while the 
average rate of Pell Grant receipt across IHEs in other categories ranged from 30% to 37%.  
HBCUs were more likely than non-HBCUs to be High CDR/High SBR: about 83% of HBCUs 
were High CDR/High SBR, while 23% of all IHEs were High CDR/High SBR (Table A-2).219  
CDRs and Student Loan Dollar Default Rates  
To examine the relationship between IHEs’ CDRs and the amount of student loan dollars owed on 
loans borrowed to attend an IHE by defaulting borrowers relative to the total amount of student 
loan dollars borrowed to attend an IHE by all of an IHE’s borrowers, CRS constructed a student 
 
218 In total, 1,308 IHEs were High CDR/High SBR. Of those, 931 (about 90%) enrolled undergraduate students in 
AY2015-2016.  
219 CRS also examined IHEs by their status as a TCU. Only three IHEs in the universe of institutions examined in this 
report were such schools, as many TCUs either had fewer than 30 borrowers entering repayment in CFY2017 and did 
not also have an official or unofficial CDR for either or both of the two previous fiscal years or because they did not 
have data necessary to calculate a CDR for CFR2017 (e.g., they do not participate in the student loan programs). Of 
those three TCUs, two were High CDR/Low SBR and one was Low CDR/Low SBR. 
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loan dollar default rate (SLDDR).220 The SLDDR is the outstanding principal and interest balance 
three years after entering repayment for all CDR-relevant loans221 of borrowers included in an 
IHE’s CDR numerator222 (i.e., borrowers who defaulted within three years of entering repayment 
in a given year) divided by the outstanding principal and interest balance at the time of entry into 
repayment for all CDR-relevant loans of borrowers included in an IHE’s CDR denominator223 
(i.e., all borrowers who entered repayment in a given year), multiplied by 100, and truncated to 
the tenth decimal place.224 CRS then divided IHEs into four categories (quadrants) based on their 
relative performance under the CFY2017 CDR and CFY2017 SLDDR across all IHEs. The 
CFY2017 SLDDR represents the amount of outstanding principal and interest balances owed 
three years after entering repayment by all of an IHE’s borrowers who entered repayment in 
FY2017 and defaulted by the end of FY2019 relative to the outstanding principal and interest 
balance at the time of entry into repayment for all of an IHE’s borrowers who entered repayment 
in FY2017. The four categories are the following: 
1.  High CDR/High SLDDR: These are IHEs with CDRs that exceeded the median 
CDR of all IHEs (9.0%) and SLDDRs that exceeded the median SLDDR of all 
IHEs (2.1%). 
2.  High CDR/Low SLDDR: These are IHEs with CDRs that exceeded the median 
CDR of all IHEs and SLDDRs that were equal to or less than the median SLDDR 
of all IHEs. 
3.  Low CDR/Low SLDDR: These are IHEs with CDRs that were equal to or less 
than the median CDR of all IHEs and SLDDRs that were equal to or less than the 
median SLDDR of all IHEs. 
4.  Low CDR/High SLDDR: These are IHEs with CDRs that were equal to or less 
than the median CDR of all IHEs and SLDDRs that exceeded the median 
SLDDR of all IHEs. 
Figure 4 depicts institutional performance under the above schema by sector. Each dot in each 
graph represents a single IHE. For each graph within the figure, the upper right quadrant depicts 
IHEs that were High CDR/High SLDDR; the upper left quadrant depicts High CDR/Low SLDDR 
IHEs; the lower left quadrant depicts Low CDR/Low SLDDR IHEs; and the lower right quadrant 
depicts Low CDR/High SLDRR IHEs. 
 
220 For a description of CRS’s methodology for these analyses, see Appendix B. 
221 CDR-relevant loans are those loans that are considered in determining whether a borrower is included in an IHE’s 
CDR calculation: FFEL program or Direct Loan program Subsidized Loans or Unsubsidized Loans borrowed to attend 
the IHE. 
222 Principal balance is the sum of borrowers’ principal balances, and interest balance is the sum of borrowers’ 
outstanding interest that accrued on their loans since they entered repayment. Both principal and interest balances are 
special tabulations provided to CRS by ED and are as of the date ED calculated such balances for CDR purposes, 
which was August 8, 2020, for CFY2017. 
223 Principal balance is the sum of all borrowers’ principal balances, and interest balance is the sum of all borrowers’ 
outstanding interest that accrued on their loans since they entered repayment. Both principal and interest balances are 
special tabulations provided to CRS by ED and are as of the date that balances were recorded in ED’s loan history 
tables in its National Student Loan Data System and closest to the date on which a borrower’s loans entered repayment. 
224 This could be considered as a somewhat parallel construction to the current CDR methodology, except that it uses 
student loan dollars as the unit of analysis rather than borrowers. However, it is possible that not all loans included in 
the SLDDR numerator are in default, as loan dollar amounts were included in the numerator based on whether the 
borrower defaulted on any relevant loan, not on whether the borrower defaulted on a particular loan. For example, if a 
borrower defaulted on one loan with a balance of $10,000 but did not default on a second loan with a balance of 
$5,000, both loans (totaling $15,000) would be included in the numerator. 
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Figure 4. CFY2017 Cohort Default Rates and  
FY2017 Student Loan Dollar Default Rates 
By Sector 
 
Source: CRS analysis of U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Official Cohort Default 
Rate for Schools, press package for FY2017, https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-09/
FY2017PressPackage.xlsx; U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Integrated 
Postsecondary Education Data System; and special tabulation of data provided to CRS by the U.S. Department of 
Education, July 13, 2022. 
Notes: The FY2017 student loan dol ar default rate (SLDDR) is the outstanding principal and interest balance 
three years after entering repayment for all CDR-relevant loans of borrowers who entered repayment on their 
loans in FY2017 and defaulted on any of those loans within three years divided by the outstanding principal and 
interest balance at the time of entry into repayment for all CDR-relevant loans of all borrowers who entered 
repayment in FY2017, and multiplied by 100.  
CDR-relevant loans are those loans that were considered in determining whether a borrower is included in the 
IHE’s CDR calculation and include FFEL program or Direct Loan program Subsidized Loans or Unsubsidized 
Loans borrowed to attend the IHE. The red vertical line in each graph represents the median FY2017 SLDDR for 
all IHEs: 2.1%. The red horizontal line in each graph represents the median CDR across all IHEs that had an 
official CDR for CFY2017: 9.0%. IHEs with CDRs that exceeded 40% (12 IHEs) were assigned a value of 40%. 
IHEs with SLDDRs that exceeded 20% (14) were assigned a value of 20%. For privacy purposes, CRS omitted 
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from this figure 56 IHEs with borrower counts in AY2015-2016 that were equal to or greater than one but less 
than ten. The majority of these IHEs (39%) were private nonprofit four-year institutions, with private for-profit 
less-than-two-year institutions (21%), public two-year institutions (14%), and private nonprofit two-year 
institutions (13%) fol owing. The remaining sectors each made up less than 10% of all such IHEs. The mean CDR 
for these IHEs was 8.5% (6.7% median), and their mean SLDDR was 4.0% (1.9% median). 
Institutional Performance  
Overall, institutional CDRs and SLDDRs tend to align somewhat closely, as indicated by the 
relatively linear distribution of IHEs within each graph.225 That is, IHEs with high CDRs 
generally have relatively high SLDRRs, and IHEs with low CDRs generally have low SLDDRs. 
Overall, IHEs most often sort into either the Low CDR/Low SLDDR grouping (45% of all IHEs) 
or the High CDR/High SLDDR (44% of IHEs) grouping. While Low CDR/Low SLDDR IHEs 
accounted for the majority of student loan dollars borrowed (68%, $51 billion) and High 
CDR/High SLDDR IHEs accounted for a relatively low percentage of student loan dollars 
borrowed (18%, $14 billion) across all IHEs, both types of IHEs accounted for fairly similar 
percentages of student loan dollars owed by defaulted borrowers (40%, $478 million and 44%, 
$531 million, respectively). Additionally, all IHEs’ CDRs were greater than their SLDDRs. This 
is an indication that on average, defaulted borrowers owed lower amounts of federal student loan 
debt than the average amount borrowed by all students attending a certain IHE.226 
IHEs that are High CDR/High SLDDR may be of most interest in evaluating institutional 
performance, as such IHEs presumably pose the highest risk for the federal government as a 
lender relative to IHEs in the other three quadrants. Public two-year IHEs had the highest rate of 
High CDR/High SLDDR institutions (87%). High CDR/High SLDDR public two-year IHEs 
accounted for 8% (about $6 billion) of student loans borrowed across all IHEs but 22% ($259 
million) of student loan dollars owed by all defaulters across all IHEs—the highest share of 
student loan dollars owed by defaulters across all IHEs, regardless of quadrant (Figure 4 and 
Table A-3, respectively).  
Overall, IHEs that were High CDR/High SLDDR had higher average rates of Pell Grant receipt 
compared to IHEs in the other quadrants (Table A-3). Low CDR/Low SLDDR IHEs had lower 
averages rates of Pell Grant receipt than all IHEs.  
HBCUs were more likely to be High CDR/High SLDDR institutions than non-HBCUs: about 
72% of HBCUs were High CDR/High SLDDR, while about 44% of all IHEs were High 
CDR/High SLDDR (Table A-3).227  
 
225 This is likely due to the fact that the SLDDR has a similar construction to the CDR in terms of time periods, loan 
types, and cohorts of borrowers covered by the relevant calculations. 
226 Across sectors and quadrants, CRS also examined the average outstanding principal and interest balances for all 
borrowers contained in the CDR denominator and for defaulted borrowers in the CDR numerator, both at time of entry 
into repayment and at the end of CFY2017. In general, the analysis revealed few trends in institutional performance 
across sectors and quadrants. However, the analysis did reveal that for all sectors and quadrants, loan balances at both 
entry into repayment and at the end of CFY2017 for defaulted borrowers were considerably lower than those of all 
borrowers. This analysis excluded consideration of PLUS Loans to graduate students and to parents of dependent 
undergraduate students. 
227 CRS also examined IHEs by their status as a TCU. Only three IHEs in the universe of institutions examined in this 
report were such schools, as many TCUs either had fewer than 30 borrowers entering repayment in CFY2017 and did 
not also have an official or unofficial CDR for either or both of the two previous fiscal years or because they did not 
have data necessary to calculate a CDR for CFR2017 (e.g., they did not participate in the student loan programs). Of 
those three TCUs, two were High CDR/High SLDDR and one was Low CDR/Low SLDDR. 
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Policy Considerations  
The CDR was initially devised as an institutional accountability metric intended to help address 
high incidence of default in the federal student loan program. At the time of its creation and 
throughout its history, one assumption underlying the CDR was that if an IHE was of sufficient 
quality, it would provide students with the skills to enable them to stay out of default on their 
loans. Although the CDR framework has evolved over the years to address some issues or 
changes in the federal student aid landscape (e.g., the transition from a two-year to three-year 
CDR to account for borrower use of deferment and forbearance options), it has not evolved to 
account for other developments, such as the wide availability and use of IDR plans. The 
framework’s fixed nature in more recent years might lead to questions about whether the CDR as 
it currently stands may be viewed as a sufficient institutional accountability metric. Congress 
might explore making adjustments to or eliminating altogether the CDR framework to address 
issues with its perceived utility or changes in the federal student loan programs.  
Adjusting the CDR Thresholds  
A primary criticism of the CDR rules as they are currently constructed and applied is that IHEs 
rarely fail the CDR metrics, and when they do, they are rarely sanctioned for it.228 As a first step 
to addressing this concern, the conceptual aim of the current CDR framework may need 
clarification. If the aim of the framework is similar to its original intent—to weed out relatively 
poorly performing (i.e., high borrower loan default) schools from Title IV programs—then the 
CDR framework may be viewed as ineffective, as few IHEs face sanctions under it. If, however, 
the aim of the framework has shifted and it is now intended to be a preventative measure to 
encourage IHEs to avoid unwanted behavior, then the fact that few IHEs face sanctions could be 
viewed as evidence of the CDR’s effectiveness, assuming that in the metric’s absence some IHEs 
might have higher default rates. 
If the CDR framework is intended to weed out relatively poorly performing IHEs, Congress 
might consider whether to adjust the thresholds for the application of CDR sanctions downward, 
as this would presumably lead to more IHEs failing to meet lower CDR thresholds. Lowering 
CDR thresholds may also have a preventative effect, as IHEs at risk of exceeding lower CDR 
thresholds might implement strategies to ensure compliance with the lower threshold.  
Stakeholder concern over the potential for decreased access to postsecondary education for 
underrepresented groups has been consistent throughout the CDR’s history and may continue to 
be so under the current CDR framework or if CDR thresholds were lowered. Concerns may be 
raised that some IHEs might effectively be penalized for enrolling high proportions of 
underserved student populations.229 Some IHEs may be discouraged from enrolling students who 
might be more likely to default on federal student loans, while other IHEs might be discouraged 
from participating in the Direct Loan program altogether. With the wide availability of student 
loan borrower benefits such as IDR plans, however, questions may be raised about whether IHEs 
with higher proportions of student loan borrowers experiencing severe student loan outcomes 
such as default should be permitted to disburse additional loans to students. Such outcomes may 
point to issues with an institution’s Title IV administrative capability, but other factors potentially 
 
228 See, for example, Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor & Pensions, Chairman Lamar Alexander, “Risk-
Sharing/Skin-in-the-Game Concepts and Proposals,” March 23, 2015, https://www.help.senate.gov/imo/media/
Risk_Sharing.pdf. 
229 Similar arguments have been raised, for example, in the context of the HEA Title IV 90/10 Rule. See CRS Report 
R46773, The 90/10 Rule Under HEA Title IV: Background and Issues. 
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affecting an IHE’s CDR, like poor loan servicing or information asymmetry with respect to 
student loan benefits, may be beyond an IHE’s control. Analyses in this report indicate that most 
IHEs might not exceed CDR thresholds at modestly lower levels (25%). Thus, few IHEs, and by 
extension their students, may be in danger of the potential loss of Title IV eligibility due to 
meeting modestly lower CDR thresholds.230  
Supplementing the CDR 
Another option to address concerns surrounding the CDR’s utility may be to supplement the CDR 
by either incorporating additional measures of assessing institutional accountability like the SBR 
or SLDDR into the CDR’s framework or to craft another student loan-centric metric such as one 
that focuses on borrowers’ progress toward repayment to operate alongside the CDR. 
Incorporating the SBR or SLDDR in a CDR-Style Metric 
The SBR would provide a measure of students who attend an IHE and who borrow funds for 
enrollment. This may help supplement the CDR by providing an indication of the extent to which 
students (as opposed to borrowers) who attend a particular IHE are at risk of defaulting on federal 
student loans. Incorporation of the SBR into the CDR framework may prove useful for many of 
the key players in the federal student loan programs.  
From the federal government’s perspective, incorporation of the SBR could help it assess whether 
certain schools with high student loan default rates pose a meaningful risk to it in terms of overall 
Title IV fiscal and program integrity. For example, with this information, federal policy might be 
focused on those IHEs with both high CDRs and high SBRs, which presumably pose the highest 
risk to the integrity of the federal student loan programs. From a student’s or prospective student’s 
perspective, incorporation of the SBR may serve as a consumer information tool, helping them 
asses how likely it is to be necessary to borrow to attend a particular IHE and, if so, how likely it 
may be for them to default on those loans. 
Incorporation of an SLDDR into the CDR framework may serve as an indicator of the relative 
financial risk an IHE poses to key stakeholders, as it would account for the amount of federal 
student loans owed by loan defaulters three years after entry into repayment. For those 
stakeholders interested in federal financial outcomes (e.g., the federal government, taxpayers), the 
SLDDR would provide more information about the financial risk to the federal government 
presented by borrowers at an IHE.  
For borrowers or potential borrowers, the SLDDR may provide additional consumer information 
about the relative financial risk of borrowing for enrollment at a particular school. Specifically, it 
may provide additional consumer information regarding the amount owed by defaulted borrowers 
associated with an IHE, which may inform their enrollment or borrowing decisions. However, the 
administrative consequences of loan default (e.g., acceleration of the loan, loss of eligibility for 
certain borrower benefits, report of the default to consumer reporting agencies)231 are the same for 
borrowers regardless of amount owed, so in those respects the SLDDR’s utility may be limited. 
 
230 Some research indicates that in the early 1990s following CDR sanctions of many private for-profit institutions, 
enrollment at private for-profit institutions decreased notably while it simultaneously increased at institution in other 
sectors. This suggests that the use of the CDR framework may not have resulted in an overall decrease in students’ 
access to postsecondary education at the time. See Stephanie R. Cellini, Rajeev Darolia, and Lesley J. Turner, “Where 
Do Students Go When For-Profit Colleges Lose Federal Aid?,” American Economic Journal: Economic Policy , vol. 
12, no. 2 (May 2020), pp. 46-83. 
231 For additional information on the consequences of loan default, see CRS Report R45931, Federal Student Loans 
Made Through the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program: Terms and Conditions for Borrowers.  
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Analyses in this report found that IHEs’ CDRs and SLDDRs are closely aligned; thus, it is 
unclear whether additional information to be gleaned from incorporation of an SLDDR into the 
existing CDR framework would be of great value to the federal government in terms of its 
interest in ensuring the fiscal integrity of the federal student aid programs. Nonetheless, if a 
reconstructed CDR framework incorporated SLDDRs to weight or rank school performance, for 
instance, there may be more potential for mitigating federal fiscal risk. The SLDDR used in this 
report was constructed to align with how the current CDR is calculated (i.e., PLUS Loans to 
graduate students and to parents of dependent undergraduate students were excluded). The 
inclusion of PLUS Loans in the CDR and/or the SLDDR may reveal differing trends.  
While the utility of incorporating the SBR and/or the SLDDR into a CDR-style metric may be 
debated and precise institutional performance under each may vary, two trends emerge when 
mapping either against the current CDR. First, in general, IHEs that might be considered to be 
performing poorly under either measure mapped against the CDR tended to have higher average 
rates of Pell Grant receipt than other IHEs; and second, HBCUs were more likely than non-
HBCUs to perform in a manner that might be of concern to some stakeholders in terms of 
borrower outcomes (i.e., they tended to be High CDR/High SBR, and to be High CDR/High 
SLDDR). Should Congress consider incorporating the measures explored in this report into a 
CDR framework, these trends may be worth noting, and could help inform policy and design 
choices in light of college access considerations.  
Considering Progress Toward Repayment 
Congress might also consider other institutional accountability measures not evaluated in this 
report to supplement the CDR. Myriad alternative institutional accountability metrics related to 
the performance of federal student loans have been proposed in recent years. These include 
proposals to measure the percentage of an IHE’s borrowers who are able to make payments on 
their loans in a timely manner,232 proposals to assess the share of an IHE’s borrowers who are 
able to pay down at least $1 of the principal amount of the federal student loans they borrowed 
within a specified timeframe,233 and others.234 Although the approaches under each of the 
proposals vary, they all tend to focus on a borrower’s ability to repay their student loan debt, 
rather than on their ability to avoid the worst consequence of nonpayment—default. Examination 
of these types of institutional accountability measures would likely warrant extensive 
consideration beyond the scope of this report, but could include deliberation on issues with and 
lessons learned from the CDR framework, including the following: 
•  a potential policy’s aims (e.g., punitive and/or preventative) and whether it is 
sufficiently targeted to meet those goals, 
•  the incentives driving key stakeholders’ decisions and their reactions to a 
potential policy (e.g., would an incentive to comply with a policy result in 
unwanted behavior from IHEs?),  
•  interactions between the potential policy and other federal student aid policies 
(e.g., how might federal student loan terms and conditions affect an IHE’s 
performance under a proposed metric?), and 
 
232 See, for example, H.R. 4674 (116th Congress). 
233 See, for example, S. 5072 (118th Congress). 
234 See, for example, J. Oliver Schak, A Policymaker’s Guide to Using New Student Debt Metrics to Strengthen Higher 
Education Accountability, The Institute for College Access and Success, 2021, https://ticas.org/wp-content/uploads/
2021/03/Student-debt-metrics-exec-summary.pdf. 
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•  whether the policy is sufficiently flexible to respond to unforeseen circumstances 
or changes in other student aid policies, and potential implementation challenges 
(e.g., data availability). 
Eliminating the CDR 
Alternatively, Congress might consider whether to eliminate the CDR framework altogether, as 
some stakeholders contend that developments in the federal student loan programs, such as the 
utilization of more generous IDR plans that may decrease incidents of default on a federal student 
loan, render “the CDR measure effectively worthless in the long-term for the purposes of 
measuring institutional quality.”235 Eliminating the measure altogether may free up administrative 
resources at ED and IHEs, as neither entity would be required to devote resources to oversight of 
and compliance with the measure. However, without replacing the CDR with another institutional 
accountability measure, it is possible that issues like those Congress and the Administration 
sought to address in the establishment of the CDR, such as incidents of fraud in the federal 
student loan programs or subpar aid administration policies, may surface again or become 
exacerbated.  
Amending the CDR Calculation 
Members of Congress and outside stakeholders have made a variety of other proposals to amend 
the CDR calculation aimed at addressing concerns about the current CDR’s utility that might be 
explored further by Congress.  
Accounting for Periods of Deferment or Forbearance 
One such proposal would be to adjust the CDR calculation to account for periods of deferment or 
forbearance, potentially by either extending the cohort default period to capture a longer period of 
borrower repayment activity or by considering loans in forbearance for a specified period of time 
as in default for purposes of calculating an IHE’s CDR.236  
Congress has previously extended the cohort default period (from two years to three years) to 
similarly address concerns about the CDR’s utility. The national CDR rate peaked relatively early 
following the switch from the two-year to the three-year cohort default period and then slowly 
decreased to levels well below the 30% CDR threshold (see Figure 1). This trend, along with the 
findings of at least one GAO report,237 may indicate that IHEs adjusted their practices to meet the 
more stringent standards. However, other factors related to student loan borrower flexibilities, 
such as the increased availability and take up of IDR plans, may also be playing a role in IHEs’ 
continued ability to meet CDR requirements. Should Congress consider extending the cohort 
default period, it might explore how the availability of these other student loan flexibilities affects 
CDR outcomes or options to curtail particular undesirable institutional behavior aimed at 
ensuring compliance with the CDR. 
A proposal to consider loans in forbearance for a specified period of time as in default for 
purposes of calculating an IHE’s CDR could address some of the same concerns as extending the 
 
235 Letter from Kelly McManus, Vice President of Higher Education, Arnold Ventures, and Clare McCann, Higher 
Education Fellow, Arnold Ventures, to Richard Blasen, U.S. Department of Education, February 10, 2023, 
file:///C:/Users/adhegji/Downloads/ED-2023-OPE-0004-13269_attachment_1.pdf. 
236 See, for example, H.R. 4674 (116th Congress). 
237 U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), Federal Student Loans: Actions Needed to Improve Oversight of 
Schools’ Default Rates, GAO-18-163, April 26, 2018, pp. 14-26. 
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cohort default period and would address at least one institutional practice of concern that has been 
identified: encouraging borrowers to enter forbearance on their loans regardless of whether that is 
the most beneficial option for them.  
Including PLUS Loans 
Another adjustment to the CDR framework that some stakeholders have proposed is the inclusion 
of PLUS Loans to parents of dependent undergraduate students (Parent PLUS Loans) and to 
graduate and professional students (Grad PLUS Loans) in the CDR calculation.238 Although the 
precursor to Parent PLUS Loans was first authorized in 1980, loans to parents to assist in 
financing their dependent undergraduate student’s education have never been included in the 
CDR framework. Since 1992, there have been no aggregate borrowing limits for Parent PLUS 
Loans. Grad PLUS Loans were first authorized in 2006 and have never been included in the CDR 
framework; there have never been aggregate borrowing limits for them.  
It is unclear whether inclusion of Grad PLUS Loans in an IHE’s CDR under the current 
framework would provide much clarity to institutional performance under the CDR, as many 
Grad PLUS Loan borrowers may already be included in institutional CDRs. While Grad PLUS 
Loans are currently excluded from the CDR, the CDR considers whether a particular borrower 
defaulted on their loans. Thus, individuals who borrowed both Subsidized Loans239 and/or 
Unsubsidized Loans and Grad PLUS Loans for their graduate or professional education at a 
particular IHE would be captured in the IHE’s CDR denominator. Should such an individual 
default on their Subsidized Loans and/or Unsubsidized Loans, they would also be included in the 
numerator. Because federal policy requires that IHEs determine a graduate or professional 
student’s maximum Unsubsidized Loan eligibility before originating Grad PLUS Loans to 
them,240 many graduate and professional students are unlikely to have borrowed only Grad PLUS 
Loans for enrollment at an IHE.241  
Inclusion of Parent PLUS Loans in the CDR framework may provide for an additional level of 
institutional accountability. Citing the absence of aggregate borrowing limits for Parent PLUS 
Loans and their exclusion from institutional accountability measures such as the CDRs, some 
stakeholders have described Parent PLUS Loans as “a no-strings-attached revenue source for 
colleges and universities, with the risk shared only by parents and the government.”242 Inclusion 
of Parent PLUS Loans in the CDR may help address some of these concerns in that an IHE’s 
CDR would more fully depict the population of student loan borrowers and defaulters associated 
with an IHE and may help better target federal policy interventions to IHEs that may be of greater 
concern to the federal government, students, and their families.243 Doing so, however, would 
 
238 See, for example, H.R. 5126 (117th Congress). 
239 Prior to July 1, 2023, Subsidized Loans were available to graduate and professional students. 
240 U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, 2023-2024 Federal Student Aid Handbook, vol. 3, p. 
42. 
241 In some cases, a borrower may have met their aggregate Subsidized Loan and/or Unsubsidized Loan limits for their 
graduate or professional education for enrollment at one IHE and may have borrowed Grad PLUS Loans for enrollment 
at another IHE.  
242 Sandy Baum, Kristin Blagg, and Rachel Fishman, Reshaping Parent PLUS Loans: Recommendations for 
Regorming the Parent PLUS Program, Urban Institute, Washington, DC, April 2019, p. 10, https://www.urban.org/
sites/default/files/publication/100106/reshaping_parent_plus_loans.pdf. 
243 For example, research indicates that, in general, Parent PLUS Loan borrowers are more successful in repaying their 
loans than students (e.g., they are less likely to default), but like loans to student borrowers, there are disparities in 
repayment outcomes among Parent PLUS Loan borrowers. For example, one piece of research calculated that default 
rates among Parent PLUS Loan borrowers at private for-profit IHEs was 16%, compared to 6% at private nonprofit 
(continued...) 
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effectively treat two borrower populations (parents and students) with differing life experiences 
and circumstances (e.g., a parent borrower may have a longer work history and earn a higher 
salary than a newly graduated student) the same, which may add a level of uncertainty as to 
whether an IHE is of sufficient educational quality.244 
 
IHEs and 5% at public IHEs. See, for example, Sandy Baum, Kristin Blagg, and Rachel Fishman, Reshaping Parent 
PLUS Loans: Recommendations for Reforming the Parent PLUS Program, Urban Institute, Washington, DC, April 
2019, pp. 11-12, https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/100106/reshaping_parent_plus_loans.pdf; and 
Wenhua Di, Carla Fletcher, and Jeff Webster, Parental Borrowing for College Comes with Repayment Issues, Federal 
Reserve Bank of Dallas, Dallas, TX, 2018, p. 4, https://www.dallasfed.org/~/media/documents/research/swe/2018/
swe1803e.pdf. 
244 Some proponents of including Parent PLUS Loans in an institutional accountability measure advocate for creation 
of a separate Parent PLUS Loan CDR to address this issue. Sandy Baum, Kristin Blagg, and Rachel Fishman, 
Reshaping Parent PLUS Loans: Recommendations for Reforming the Parent PLUS Program, Urban Institute, 
Washington, DC, April 2019, p. 21, https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/100106/
reshaping_parent_plus_loans.pdf. 
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Appendix A. Institutional Characteristics 
Table A-1, Table A-2, and Table A-3 present information on characteristics of IHEs as measured 
according to the CDR, the CDR paired with the SBR, and the CDR paired with the SLDDR. This 
information includes institutional sector, student enrollment, the percentage of undergraduate 
students who received a Pell Grant for enrollment at an IHE, and institutional status as a 
Historically Black College or University (HBCU). Information provided is based on institutional 
CDRs for CFY2017 and selected characteristics for AY2015-2016. This information supports the 
analysis presented in the “CDR Distribution Within and Across Institutional Sectors” and “An 
Initial Look at How SBRs and SLDDRs Align with CDRs Within and Across Sectors” sections of 
this report. 
 
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Table A-1. CFY2017 Cohort Default Rate (CDR) Bands: IHEs and AY2015-2016 Selected  
Characteristics, by Sector and by HBCU Status 
Average Percentage of 
Undergraduates Receiving 
 
IHEs 
Student Enrollmenta 
a Pell Grantb 
CDR 
# 
%  
#  
%  
% 
All IHEs 
Total 
4,373 
100 
25,930,000 
100 
36 
CDR ≥ 30% 
53 
1 
28,000 
0 
53 
25% ≤ CDR < 30% 
114 
3 
150,000 
1 
55 
CDR ≤ 9%c  
2,216 
51 
13,830,000 
53 
32 
CDR > 9%c 
2,157 
49 
12,100,000 
47 
40 
Public Four-Year 
Sector Total 
623 
100 
9,732,000  
100 
35 
CDR ≥ 30% 
0 
0 
   – 
0 
– 
25% ≤ CDR < 30% 
3 
1 
6,000  
0 
59 
CDR ≤ 9%c  
415 
67 
7,595,000  
78 
33 
CDR > 9%c  
208 
33 
2,137,000  
22 
42 
Private Nonprofit Four-Year 
Sector Total 
1,359 
100 
4,955,000  
100 
33 
CDR ≥ 30% 
7 
1 
5,000  
0 
85 
25% ≤ CDR < 30% 
11 
1 
15,000  
0 
66 
CDR ≤ 9%c 
1,081 
80 
4,276,000  
86 
29 
CDR > 9%c  
278 
20 
679,000 
14 
55 
Private For-Profit Four-Year 
Sector Total 
176 
100 
1,549,000 
100 
53 
CRS-48 
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Average Percentage of 
Undergraduates Receiving 
 
IHEs 
Student Enrollmenta 
a Pell Grantb 
CDR 
# 
%  
#  
%  
% 
CDR ≥ 30% 
0 
0 
– 
0 
– 
25% ≤ CDR < 30% 
2 
1 
474 
0 
58 
CDR ≤ 9%c  
98 
56 
457,000 
30 
47 
CDR > 9%c  
78 
44 
1,092,000 
71 
55 
Public Two-Year 
Sector Total 
796 
100 
8,974,000  
100 
34 
CDR ≥ 30% 
4 
1 
16,000  
0 
35 
25% ≤ CDR < 30% 
17 
2 
80,000  
1 
45 
CDR ≤ 9%c  
94 
12 
1,340,000  
15 
30 
CDR > 9%c  
702 
88 
7,634,000  
85 
35 
Private Nonprofit Two-Year 
Sector Total 
106 
100 
71,000 
100 
65 
CDR ≥ 30% 
2 
2 
  960  
1 
38 
25% ≤ CDR < 30% 
5 
5 
3,000  
4 
69 
CDR ≤ 9%c  
70 
66 
21,000  
29 
50 
CDR > 9%c 
36 
34 
50,000  
71 
70 
Private For-Profit Two-Year 
Sector Total 
380 
100 
297,000  
100 
61 
CDR ≥ 30% 
7 
1 
859  
0 
52 
25% ≤ CDR < 30% 
11 
3 
7,000  
2 
77 
CDR ≤ 9%c  
146 
38 
66,000 
22 
59 
CDR > 9%c  
234 
62 
231,000  
78 
62 
CRS-49 
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Average Percentage of 
Undergraduates Receiving 
 
IHEs 
Student Enrollmenta 
a Pell Grantb 
CDR 
# 
%  
#  
%  
% 
Public Less-Than-Two-Year 
Sector Total 
126 
100 
37,000 
100 
39 
CDR ≥ 30% 
1 
1 
162  
0 
92 
25% ≤ CDR < 30% 
2 
2 
459  
1 
26 
CDR ≤ 9%c  
42 
33 
7,000  
18 
53 
CDR > 9%c  
84 
67 
31,000  
82 
36 
Private Nonprofit Less-Than-Two-Year 
Sector Total 
26 
100 
16,000  
100 
61 
CDR ≥ 30% 
0 
0 
– 
0 
– 
25% ≤ CDR < 30% 
0 
0 
– 
0 
– 
CDR ≤ 9%c  
10 
39 
4,000  
24 
46 
CDR > 9%  
16 
62 
12,000 
77 
66 
Private For-Profit Less-Than-Two- Year 
Sector Total 
781 
100 
299,000 
100 
61 
CDR ≥ 30% 
32 
4 
5,000 
2 
66 
25% ≤ CDR < 30% 
63 
8 
39,000  
13 
65 
CDR ≤ 9%c  
260 
33 
65,000  
22 
54 
CDR > 9%c 
521 
67 
78 
78 
63 
HBCUs 
Sector Total 
90  
100 
314,000  
100 
61 
CDR ≥ 30% 
   6  
7 
6,000  
2 
83 
25% ≤ CDR < 30% 
 10  
11 
24,000  
8 
64 
CRS-50 
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Average Percentage of 
Undergraduates Receiving 
 
IHEs 
Student Enrollmenta 
a Pell Grantb 
CDR 
# 
%  
#  
%  
% 
CDR ≤ 9%c  
   7  
8 
37,000  
12 
57 
CDR > 9%c  
  83  
92 
277,000  
88 
62 
Source: CRS analysis of U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Official Cohort Default Rate for Schools, press package for FY2017, 
https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-09/FY2017PressPackage.xlsx; and U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Integrated 
Postsecondary Education Data System. 
Notes: Details may not add to totals due to rounding. 
a.  Represents the 12-month unduplicated headcount of undergraduate and graduate students enrol ed for credit at an IHE at any point during AY2015-2016.  
b.  Excludes IHEs that reported zero individuals enrol ed as undergraduate students in AY2015-2016. 
c.  9% was the median CFY2017 CDR for all IHEs examined.  
Table A-2. CFY2017 Cohort Default Rates (CDRs) and AY2015-2016 Student Borrower Rates (SBR):  
IHEs and AY2015-2016 Selected Characteristics, by Sector and by HBCU Status 
Average Percentage 
of Undergraduates 
Student Enrollment 
Receiving a Pell 
 
IHEs 
Borrowers (SBR Numerator)a 
 (SBR Denominator)b 
Grantc 
CDR/SBR 
Quadrantsd 
# 
%  
#  
%  
#  
%  
% 
All IHEs 
Total 
  4,373  
100 
8,222,000 
100 
25,930,000 
100 
36 
High CDR/High SBRe 
  1,009  
23 
1,295,000 
16 
2,115,000 
8 
58 
High CDR/Low SBRf 
  1,148  
26 
1,692,000 
21 
9,985,000 
39 
36 
Low CDR/Low SBRg 
  1,039  
24 
2,895,000 
35 
9,631,000 
37 
31 
Low CDR/High SBRh 
  1,177  
27 
2,339,000 
28 
4,199,000 
16 
37 
CRS-51 
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Average Percentage 
of Undergraduates 
Student Enrollment 
Receiving a Pell 
 
IHEs 
Borrowers (SBR Numerator)a 
 (SBR Denominator)b 
Grantc 
CDR/SBR 
Quadrantsd 
# 
%  
#  
%  
#  
%  
% 
Public Four-Year 
Sector Total 
     623  
100 
3,646,000 
100 
9,732,000 
100 
35 
High CDR/High SBRe 
        78  
13 
303,000  
8 
520,000  
5 
51 
High CDR/Low SBRf 
     130  
21 
381,000  
10 
1,617,000  
17 
39 
Low CDR/Low SBRg 
     272  
44 
2,011,000 
55 
5,775,000  
59 
32 
Low CDR/High SBRh 
     143  
23 
951,000  
26 
1,820,000 
19 
36 
Private Nonprofit Four-Year 
Sector Total 
  1,359  
100 
2,257,000 
100 
4,955,000  
100 
33 
High CDR/High SBRe 
     223  
16 
374,000  
17 
578,000  
12 
55 
High CDR/Low SBRf 
        55  
4 
37,000  
2 
102,000  
2 
52 
Low CDR/Low SBRg 
     460  
34 
761,000 
34 
2,389,000  
48 
24 
Low CDR/High SBRh 
     621  
46 
1,086,000  
48 
1,887,000  
38 
35 
Private For-Profit Four-Year 
Sector Total 
     176  
100 
795,000 
100 
1,549,000  
100 
53 
High CDR/High SBRe 
        61  
35 
337,000 
42 
558,000  
36 
61 
High CDR/Low SBRf 
        17  
10 
205,000  
26 
534,000  
35 
49 
Low CDR/Low SBRg 
        33  
19 
31,000  
4 
100,000 
7 
34 
Low CDR/High SBRh 
        65  
37 
222,000 
28 
357,000 
23 
52 
Public Two-Year 
Sector Total 
     796  
100 
1,136,000  
100 
8,974,000  
100 
34 
High CDR/High SBRe 
          7  
1 
7,000  
1 
13,000  
0.1 
73 
CRS-52 
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Average Percentage 
of Undergraduates 
Student Enrollment 
Receiving a Pell 
 
IHEs 
Borrowers (SBR Numerator)a 
 (SBR Denominator)b 
Grantc 
CDR/SBR 
Quadrantsd 
# 
%  
#  
%  
#  
%  
% 
High CDR/Low SBRf 
     695  
87 
1,037,000  
91 
7,621,000  
85 
35 
Low CDR/Low SBRg 
        88  
11 
76,000  
7 
1,310,000  
15 
30 
Low CDR/High SBRh 
          6  
1 
15,000 
1 
29,000  
0.3 
33 
Private Nonprofit Two-Year 
Sector Total 
106 
100 
 43,000 
100 
 71,000 
100 
65 
High CDR/High SBRe 
 29  
27 
32,000  
74 
 47,000 
67 
71 
High CDR/Low SBRf 
 7  
7 
 1,000  
1 
3,000  
4 
41 
Low CDR/Low SBRg 
 23  
22 
 2,000  
4 
 6,000 
9 
34 
Low CDR/High SBRh 
 47  
44 
9,000  
21 
14,000 
20 
56 
Private For-Profit Two-Year 
Sector Total 
    380  
100 
165,000  
100 
297,000  
100 
61 
High CDR/High SBRe 
     190  
50 
124,000  
75 
204,000  
69 
63 
High CDR/Low SBRf 
        44  
12 
8,000  
5 
26,000  
9 
52 
Low CDR/Low SBRg 
        44  
12 
5,000  
3 
20,000 
7 
55 
Low CDR/High SBRh 
     102  
27 
28,000  
17 
46,000  
16 
61 
Public Less-Than-Two-Year 
Sector Total 
     126  
100 
13,000 
100 
37,000 
100 
39 
High CDR/High SBRe 
        54  
43 
4,000  
34 
7,000  
19 
67 
High CDR/Low SBRf 
        30  
24 
6,000  
45 
24,000  
64 
27 
Low CDR/Low SBRg 
        14  
11 
1,000  
7 
4,000  
10 
50 
Low CDR/High SBRh 
        28  
22 
2,000  
14 
3,000 
8 
55 
CRS-53 
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Average Percentage 
of Undergraduates 
Student Enrollment 
Receiving a Pell 
 
IHEs 
Borrowers (SBR Numerator)a 
 (SBR Denominator)b 
Grantc 
CDR/SBR 
Quadrantsd 
# 
%  
#  
%  
#  
%  
% 
Private Nonprofit Less-Than-Two-Year 
Sector Total 
        26  
100 
4,000  
100 
16,000  
100 
61 
High CDR/High SBRe 
          8  
31 
1,000  
22 
1,000  
8 
76 
High CDR/Low SBRf 
          8  
31 
2,000 
56 
1,000  
68 
65 
Low CDR/Low SBRg 
          7  
27 
1,000  
17 
3,000  
22 
46 
Low CDR/High SBRh 
          3  
12 
191  
5 
314  
2 
48 
Private For-Profit Less-Than-Two- Year 
Sector Total 
     781  
100 
161,000 
100 
299,000  
100 
61 
High CDR/High SBRe 
     359  
46 
112,000  
70 
186,000  
62 
66 
High CDR/Low SBRf 
     162  
21 
 16,000  
10 
48,000 
16 
52 
Low CDR/Low SBRg 
        98  
13 
    8,000 
5 
23,000  
8 
42 
Low CDR/High SBRh 
     162  
21 
    25,000 
16 
42,000 
14 
61 
HBCUs 
Total 
        90  
100 
  196,000  
100 
314,000  
100 
61 
High CDR/High SBRe 
        75  
83 
  162,000 
83 
223,000  
74 
66 
High CDR/Low SBRf 
          8  
0 
     9,000  
5 
45,000  
14 
38 
Low CDR/Low SBRg 
– 
0 
0 
0 
    – 
0 
– 
Low CDR/High SBRh 
7  
8 
24,000 
13 
37,000  
12 
57 
Source: CRS analysis of U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Official Cohort Default Rate for Schools, press package for FY2017, 
https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-09/FY2017PressPackage.xlsx; and U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Integrated 
Postsecondary Education Data System. 
Notes: Details may not add to totals due to rounding.   
CRS-54 
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a.  Represents the total number of undergraduate and graduate students who borrowed a Direct Subsidized Loan, Unsubsidized Loan, or Graduate PLUS Loan to 
attend an IHE in AY2015-2016.  
b.  Represents the 12-month unduplicated headcount of undergraduate and graduate students enrol ed for credit at an IHE at any point during AY2015-2016.   
c.  Excludes IHEs that reported zero individuals enrol ed as undergraduate students in AY2015-2016. 
d.  The SBR is the percentage of graduate and undergraduate students who borrowed a Direct Loan program loan to attend an IHE in AY2015-2016, truncated to the 
tenth decimal place. 
e.  IHEs with CDRs that exceeded the median CDR of all IHEs (9%) and SBRs that exceeded the median SBR for all IHEs (46.4%). 
f. 
IHEs with CDRs that exceeded the median CDR of all IHEs (9%) and SBRs that were equal to or lower than the median SBR of all IHEs (46.4%). 
g.  IHEs with CDRs that were equal to or lower than the median CDR of all IHEs (9%) and SBRs that were equal to or lower than the median SBR of all IHEs (46.4%),  
h.  IHEs with CDRs that were equal to or lower than the median CDR of all IHEs (9%) and SBRs that exceeded the median SBR of all IHEs (46.4%).  
Table A-3. CFY2017 Cohort Default Rates (CDRs) and FY2017 Student Loan Dollar Default Rates (SLDDR): IHEs  
and AY2015-2016 Selected Characteristics, by Sector and by HBCU Status 
Average 
Dollars Borrowed by 
Percentage of 
All Borrowers 
Undergraduates 
Dollars Owed by Defaulters 
(SLDDR 
Receiving a Pell 
(SLDDR Numerator; $ in 
Denominator; $ in 
 
IHEs 
Student Enrollmenta 
Grantb 
thousands)c 
thousands)d 
CDR/SLDDR 
Quadrante 
# 
% 
# 
% 
% 
$ 
% 
$ 
% 
All IHEs 
Total 
4,373  
100 
25,923,000  
100 
36 
 1,201,219  
100 
 75,957,246  
100 
High CDR/High SLDDRf 
1,909  
44 
10,054,000  
39 
39 
530,963  
44 
13,796,029  
18 
High CDR/Low SLDDRg 
248  
6 
2,045,000  
8 
47 
174,292  
15 
10,143,197  
13 
Low CDR/Low SLDDRh 
1,955  
45 
13,053,000 
50 
32 
477,855  
40 
51,337,950  
68 
Low CDR/High SLDDRi 
261  
6 
777,000  
3 
37 
18,109  
0 
680,071  
1 
Public Four-Year 
Sector Total 
623  
100 
9,732,000  
100 
35 
 390,049 
100 
 32,052,010 
100 
High CDR/High SLDDRf 
137  
22 
1,314,000  
14 
42 
 73,189 
19 
 2,336,687 
7 
High CDR/Low SLDDRg 
71  
11 
823,000  
9 
43 
 58,113  
15 
 3,236,765 
10 
CRS-55 
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Average 
Dollars Borrowed by 
Percentage of 
All Borrowers 
Undergraduates 
Dollars Owed by Defaulters 
(SLDDR 
Receiving a Pell 
(SLDDR Numerator; $ in 
Denominator; $ in 
 
IHEs 
Student Enrollmenta 
Grantb 
thousands)c 
thousands)d 
CDR/SLDDR 
Quadrante 
# 
% 
# 
% 
% 
$ 
% 
$ 
% 
Low CDR/Low SLDDRh 
403  
65 
7,495,000  
77 
33 
 257,078  
66 
 26,412,711 
82 
Low CDR/High SLDDRi 
12  
2 
100,000  
1 
54 
 1,669  
0 
 65,846  
0 
Private Nonprofit Four-Year 
Sector Total 
1,359  
100 
4,955,000  
100 
33 
 263,090  
100 
 24,862,184 
100 
High CDR/High SLDDRf 
175  
13 
287,000  
6 
63 
 50,088 
19 
 1,541,156 
6 
High CDR/Low SLDDRh 
103  
8 
393,000  
8 
48 
 34,776  
13 
 2,094,602  
8 
Low CDR/Low SLDDRh 
1,022  
75 
4,205,000  
85 
29 
 172,007  
65 
 20,993,771 
84 
Low CDR/High SLDDRi 
59  
4 
71,000  
1 
59 
 6,219 
2 
 232,656  
1 
Private For-Profit Four-Year 
Sector Total 
176  
100 
1,549,000  
100 
53 
 162,514  
100 
 9,149,940 
100 
High CDR/High SLDDRf 
46  
26 
374,000  
24 
54 
 46,146  
28 
 1,621,740 
18 
High CDR/Low SLDDRg 
32  
18 
718,000  
46 
55 
 76,117 
47 
 4,546,274 
50 
Low CDR/Low SLDDRh 
91  
52 
439,000  
28 
47 
 37,375  
23 
 2,871,164 
31 
Low CDR/High SLDDRi 
7  
4 
19,000  
1 
81 
 2,876 
2 
 110,761  
1 
Public Two-Year 
Sector Total 
796  
100 
8,974,000  
100 
34 
 272,636  
100 
 7,028,086  
100 
High CDR/High SLDDRf 
691  
87 
7,540,000  
84 
35 
 258,650  
95 
 6,126,287 
87 
High CDR/Low SLDDRh 
11  
1 
94,000  
1 
38 
 4,002  
2 
 190,906  
3 
Low CDR/Low SLDDRh 
54  
7 
795,000  
9 
29 
 6,198  
2 
 567,979  
8 
Low CDR/High SLDDRi 
40  
5 
545,000 
6 
30 
 3,787  
1 
 142,914  
2 
CRS-56 
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Average 
Dollars Borrowed by 
Percentage of 
All Borrowers 
Undergraduates 
Dollars Owed by Defaulters 
(SLDDR 
Receiving a Pell 
(SLDDR Numerator; $ in 
Denominator; $ in 
 
IHEs 
Student Enrollmenta 
Grantb 
thousands)c 
thousands)d 
CDR/SLDDR 
Quadrante 
# 
% 
# 
% 
% 
$ 
% 
$ 
% 
Private Nonprofit Two-Year 
Sector Total 
106  
100 
71,000  
100 
65 
 10,030  
100 
 320,137  
100 
High CDR/High SLDDRf 
32  
30 
47,000 
67 
71 
 8,981  
90 
 218,149 
68 
High CDR/Low SLDDRg 
4  
4 
2,000 
3 
61 
 208  
2 
 13,113 
4 
Low CDR/Low SLDDRh 
66  
62 
17,000  
24 
53 
 712  
7 
 84,406 
26 
Low CDR/High SLDDRi 
4  
4 
4,000  
6 
35 
 128 
1 
 4,470 
1 
Private For-Profit Two-Year 
Sector Total 
380  
100 
297,000  
100 
61 
 44,415  
100 
 1,307,067  
100 
High CDR/High SLDDRf 
222  
58 
227,000 
77 
62 
 40,836  
92 
 1,021,537  
78 
High CDR/Low SLDDRg 
12  
3 
4,000  
1 
52 
 329  
1 
 18,791  
1 
Low CDR/Low SLDDRh 
117  
31 
58,000  
19 
59 
 2,522  
6 
 238,506  
18 
Low CDR/High SLDDRi 
29  
7 
9,000  
3 
61 
 727  
2 
 28,232  
2 
Public Less-Than-Two-Year 
Sector Total 
126  
100 
37,000  
100 
39 
 3,751 
100 
 111,633  
100 
High CDR/High SLDDRf 
77  
61 
20,000  
54 
37 
 2,640 
70 
 49,357  
44 
High CDR/Low SLDDRg 
7  
6 
10,000 
28 
36 
 659 
18 
 38,143  
34 
Low CDR/Low SLDDRh 
26  
21 
3,000 
9 
52 
 205  
6 
 15,313  
14 
Low CDR/High SLDDRi 
16  
13 
3,000 
9 
53 
 248 
7 
 8,820 
78 
Private Nonprofit Less-Than-Two-Year 
Sector Total 
26  
100 
16,000  
100 
61 
 1,242  
100 
 25,441  
100 
CRS-57 
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Average 
Dollars Borrowed by 
Percentage of 
All Borrowers 
Undergraduates 
Dollars Owed by Defaulters 
(SLDDR 
Receiving a Pell 
(SLDDR Numerator; $ in 
Denominator; $ in 
 
IHEs 
Student Enrollmenta 
Grantb 
thousands)c 
thousands)d 
CDR/SLDDR 
Quadrante 
# 
% 
# 
% 
% 
$ 
% 
$ 
% 
High CDR/High SLDDRf 
15  
58 
11,000 
70 
64 
 1,074  
87 
18,154  
71 
High CDR/Low SLDDRg 
1  
4 
1,000  
6 
85 
 6  
1 
 302  
1 
Low CDR/Low SLDDRh 
8  
31 
3,000  
16 
44 
 54  
4 
 4,115  
16 
Low CDR/High SLDDRi 
2  
8 
1,000  
8 
50 
 108  
9 
 2,870  
11 
Private For-Profit Less-Than-Two-Year 
Sector Total 
781  
100 
299,000 
100 
61 
 53,492  
100 
 1,100,748  
100 
High CDR/High SLDDRf 
514  
66 
234,000  
78 
63 
 49,359  
92 
 862,962  
78 
High CDR/Low SLDDRg 
7  
1 
1,000 
0 
60 
 82  
0.2 
 4,301  
0 
Low CDR/Low SLDDRh 
168  
22 
40,000  
13 
55 
 1,703  
3 
 149,985  
17 
Low CDR/High SLDDRi 
92  
12 
25,000  
8 
52 
 2,347  
4 
 83,500  
8 
HBCUs 
Total 
90  
100 
314,000  
100 
61 
 50,678  
100 
 1,996,440 
100 
High CDR/High SLDDRf 
65  
72 
196,000  
63 
63 
 38,021  
75 
 1,101,658 
55 
High CDR/Low SLDDRg 
18  
20 
81,000  
26 
58 
 9,257  
18 
 563,087 
28 
Low CDR/Low SLDDRh 
7  
8 
37,000  
12 
57 
 3,399  
7 
 331,695  
17 
Low CDR/High SLDDRi 
–  
0 
– 
0 
– 
 – 
0 
– 
0 
Source: CRS analysis of U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Official Cohort Default Rate for Schools, press package for FY2017, 
https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-09/FY2017PressPackage.xlsx; and U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics, Integrated 
Postsecondary Education Data System. 
Notes: Details may not add to totals due to rounding. 
a.  Represents the 12-month unduplicated headcount of undergraduate and graduate students enrol ed for credit at an IHE at any point during AY2015-2016.   
CRS-58 
 
b.  Excludes IHEs that reported zero individuals enrol ed as undergraduate students in AY2015-2016.  
c.  Represents the outstanding principal and interest balance three years after entering repayment for all CDR-relevant loans borrowed to attend a given IHE of 
borrowers who entered repayment on their loans in FY2017 and defaulted on any of those loans within three years. CDR-relevant loans are those loans that were 
considered in determining whether a borrower was included in the IHE’s CDR calculation and include Federal Family Education Loan program or Direct Loan 
program Subsidized Loans or Unsubsidized Loans borrowed to attend the IHE.  
d.  Represents the outstanding principal and interest balance at the time of entry into repayment for all CDR-relevant loans borrowed to attend a given IHE of all 
borrowers who entered repayment in FY2017, and multiplied by 100. CDR-relevant loans are those loans that were considered in determining whether a borrower 
was included in the IHE’s CDR calculation and include Federal Family Education Loan program or Direct Loan program Subsidized Loans or Unsubsidized Loans 
borrowed to attend the IHE.  
e.  The FY2017 student loan dol ar default rate (SLDDR) is the outstanding principal and interest balance three years after entering repayment for all CDR-relevant 
loans borrowed to attend a given IHE of borrowers who entered repayment on their loans in FY2017 and defaulted on any of those loans within three years, 
divided by the outstanding principal and interest balance at the time of entry into repayment for all CDR-relevant loans borrowed to attend a given IHE of all 
borrowers who entered repayment in FY2017, multiplied by 100, and truncated to the tenth decimal place. CDR-relevant loans are those loans that were 
considered in determining whether a borrower was included in the IHE’s CDR calculation and include Federal Family Education Loan program or Direct Loan 
program Subsidized Loans or Unsubsidized Loans borrowed to attend the IHE.   
f. 
IHEs with CDRs that exceeded the median CDR of all IHEs (9%) and SLDDRs that exceeded the median SLDDR of all IHEs (2.1%).  
g.  IHEs with CDRs that exceeded the median CDR of all IHEs (9%) and SLDDRs that were equal to or lower than the median SLDDR of all IHEs (2.1%).  
h.  IHEs with CDRs that were equal to or lower than the median CDR of all IHEs (9%) and SLDDRs that were equal to or lower than the median SLDDR of all IHEs 
(2.1%).   
i. 
IHEs with CDRs that were equal to or lower than the median CDR of all IHEs (9%) and SLDDRs that exceeded the median SLDDR of all IHEs (2.1%).  
 
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Appendix B. Methodology for Examining Three 
Options of Calculating CDRs by Institutional 
Characteristics 
In this report, CRS examined three methodologies to evaluate institutional performance, all of 
which incorporate the current CDR metric: (1) the current CDR methodology, (2) the current 
CDR methodology and incorporating institutional student loan borrower rates (SBRs), and (3) the 
current CDR methodology and incorporating institutional student loan dollar default rates 
(SLDDRs). In exploring institutional performance under these methodologies, CRS examined a 
variety of institutional characteristics (e.g., sector, Pell Grant receipt). 
To develop the universe of IHEs (and their characteristics) that were examined in this report, CRS 
first selected IHEs with official CDRs issued for CFY2017 (4,796 IHEs) from the FY2017 ED 
press package file of CDRs.245 Although more recent institutional CDRs (for CFY2018, 
CFY2019, and CFY2020) are available, they are excluded from this analysis because they reflect 
years in which the COVID-19 student loan payment pause was in effect, which made it 
significantly less likely for most borrowers to default on their student loans. As such, those years’ 
CDRs are lower than they might otherwise have been in the absence of that policy and may not 
provide sufficient insight into institutional performance under the CDR metric in more typical 
circumstances. 
CRS then appended onto the list of IHEs selected institutional characteristics obtained from ED’s 
Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS). IPEDS is a series of surveys annually 
conducted by ED to gather institutional data on a variety of topics from Title IV participating 
IHEs. For this analysis, CRS selected the reported IPEDS data that most closely aligned with the 
final year (described below) in which a student loan borrower captured by the CFY2017 CDR 
most likely would have been enrolled. Aligning the data in this way provides a sense of an 
institution’s characteristics when the borrower most likely was enrolled, thus potentially 
reflecting the borrower’s educational experience that may have contributed to whether or not they 
defaulted on their student loan within the three-year CDR timeframe.  
The CFY2017 CDR measures the proportion of students who entered repayment in FY2017 
(October 1, 2016-September 30, 2017) and defaulted in FY2017, FY2018, or FY2019. Borrowers 
of Subsidized Loans and Unsubsidized Loans do not enter repayment on their loans while they 
are enrolled in an eligible educational program on at least a half-time basis and during a six-
month grace period following their graduation, cessation of enrollment, or enrollment below half-
time status. For purposes of this analysis, CRS assumed that borrowers entered repayment at the 
beginning of FY2017 and immediately after a six-month grace period, resulting in borrowers 
having been enrolled in an institution around April 2016. Many IPEDS data are reported based on 
the academic year (July 1-June 30); thus, data selected by CRS for this analysis reflects 
institutional characteristics for AY2015-2016 (July 1, 2015-June 30, 2016), which includes April 
2016. When IPEDS variables that reflect AY2015-2016 were unavailable, CRS used available 
variables closest to AY2015-2016 that reflected a time period before April 2016. The appended 
institutional characteristics were the following: 
 
245 U.S. Department of Education, Office of Federal Student Aid, Official Cohort Default Rate for Schools, press 
package for FY2017, https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-09/FY2017PressPackage.xlsx. 
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•  Institutional sector for AY2015-2016. This variable divides the universe of 
IHEs according to control (e.g., public, private not-for-profit, private for-profit) 
and level (e.g., two-year, four-year and higher). 
•  Status as a Historically Black College or University (HBCU) for AY2015-
2016. This variable indicates whether an institution was classified as an HBCU in 
AY2015-2016. 
•  Percentage of undergraduate students who received a Pell Grant in AY2015-
2016.246 CRS divided the number of undergraduate students awarded a Pell Grant 
at all institutions within a relevant category (e.g., public two-year institution, 
HBCU) by the number of all undergraduate students enrolled at IHEs within that 
category. 
•  12-month unduplicated headcount for AY2015-2016. This variable represents 
the total unduplicated headcount of undergraduate and graduate students enrolled 
for credit at an IHE at any point during AY2015-2016.  
CRS next appended onto the list ED-provided data on (1) the total number of graduate and 
undergraduate students247 who borrowed a Direct Subsidized Loan, Unsubsidized Loan, or 
Graduate PLUS Loan to attend the relevant IHE in AY2015-2016, (2) the outstanding principal 
and interest balance for all CDR-relevant loans248 for all borrowers included in an IHE’s CDR 
numerator for CFY2017249; and (3) the outstanding principal and interest balance for all CDR-
relevant loans for all borrowers included in an IHE’s CDR denominator for CFY2017.250 
CRS then calculated each IHE’s SBR and SLDDR. To calculate each SBR, CRS divided the ED-
provided total number of graduate and undergraduate students who borrowed a Direct Loan to 
attend the IHE in AY2015-2016 (July 1, 2015-June 30, 2016) by the IPEDS 12-month 
unduplicated headcount for AY2015-2016 and multiplied the result by 100. To calculate the 
SLDDR, CRS divided the ED-provided outstanding principal and interest balances three years 
after entering repayment for all CDR-relevant loans of borrowers who entered repayment on 
those loans in FY2017 and defaulted on any of those loans within three years by the ED-provided 
outstanding principal and interest balances at the time of entry into repayment for all CDR-
relevant loans for all borrowers who entered repayment in FY2017 and multiplied the result by 
100. For each measure, CRS truncated the final results to the tenth decimal place to align with 
how CDRs are calculated. 
Finally, from this list of 4,796 IHEs with CFY2017 CDRs, CRS excluded the following: 
 
246 For purposes of this variable, schools may be considered academic reporters or program reporters. For academic 
reporters, an academic year generally spans September to June, and such schools report on students who were enrolled 
as of October 15, or the institution’s official reporting data. For program reporters, an academic year generally spans 
July 1-June 30, and such schools report on students who were enrolled any time during the academic year. 
247 Borrowers of PLUS Loans to parents of dependent undergraduate students were not included. 
248 CDR-relevant loans are those loans that are considered in determining whether a borrower is included in an IHE’s 
CDR calculation. These include FFEL program or Direct Loan program Subsidized Loans or Unsubsidized Loans 
borrowed to attend the IHE. 
249 Principal balance is the sum of borrowers’ principal balances. Interest balance is the sum of borrowers’ outstanding 
interest that accrued on their loans since they entered repayment. Both principal and interest balances are as of the date 
ED calculated such balances for CDR purposes, which was August 8, 2020, for CFY2017. 
250 Principal balance is the sum of all borrowers’ principal balances. Interest balance is the sum of all borrowers’ 
outstanding interest that accrued on their loans between the date they entered repayment and the date of recordation in 
ED’s loan history tables. Both principal and interest balances are special tabulations provided to CRS by ED and are as 
of the date that balances were recorded in ED’s loan history tables in its National Student Loan Data System and 
closest to the date on which a borrower’s loans entered repayment in FY2017. 
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•  foreign IHEs (344),251 
•  IHEs without reported IPEDS data or with incomplete IPEDS data needed for the 
analysis (11),252 
•  IHEs with an IPEDS-reported sector of “unknown” or “n/a” (17), 
•  IHEs for which ED-reported borrower counts exceeded IPEDS-reported 
enrollment (34), and 
•  IHEs for which ED did not provide the total number of graduate and 
undergraduate students who borrowed a Direct Loan to attend the relevant IHE in 
AY2015-2016 as of August 30, 2023 (17). 
This resulted in a total of 4,373 IHEs. 
 
251 Foreign IHEs do not report data to IPEDS. 
252 An IHE may have a CDR for CFY2017 but may not have reported IPEDS data for the specified time frames for a 
few reasons, including, for example, that the institution (1) closed or otherwise ceased participating in the Title IV 
programs prior to the IPEDS reporting timeline or (2) underwent a change in control (e.g., the school was a branch 
campus of a Title IV-participating IHE and became a separate new IHE) that resulted in its having another IHE’s CDR 
imputed to it for a time frame for which it did not have its own IPEDS data to report. 
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Appendix C. Selected Acronyms Used in This 
Report 
 
Acronym 
Definition 
CDR 
Cohort Default Rate 
CFY 
Cohort Fiscal Year 
ED 
Department of Education 
FFEL 
Federal Family Education Loan 
GA 
Guaranty Agency 
GSL 
Guaranteed Student Loan 
HBCU 
Historically Black Col ege or University 
HEA 
Higher Education Act  
HEOA 
Higher Education Opportunity Act 
IDR 
Income-Driven Repayment 
IHE 
Institution of Higher Education 
IPEDS 
Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System 
NSLDS 
National Student Loan Data System 
PRI 
Participation Rate Index 
SBR 
Student Borrower Rate 
SLDDR 
Student Loan Dol ar Default Rate 
SLS 
Supplemental Loans for Students 
TCU 
Tribal Col ege or University 
 
 
 
 
Author Information 
 
Alexandra Hegji 
  Sylvia L. Bryan 
Analyst in Social Policy 
Research Assistant 
    
    
 
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Disclaimer 
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