KEY POINTS
  • In a U.S. Department of Education memo, senior officials detail the errors made by its servicers as tens of millions of borrowers resumed their payments in October.
  • The companies sent more than 21,000 people "very high" and "potentially incorrect" bills, according to the memo. One borrower was told they owed $108,895.19 for the month.
Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona answers questions during the daily briefing at the White House, Aug. 5, 2021.

As student loan bills restarted in October for tens of millions of Americans, the companies that service those loans made errors that potentially violate federal and state consumer protection laws.

In a memo quietly published Wednesday night on the U.S. Department of Education's website, senior officials in the department's office of Federal Student Aid detail how some of its servicers botched the return to repayment, and possibly put the government at "substantial reputational risk."