07.11.26

Setting up student loan payments safely: How to make sure you’re using the right provider and not a scam site

Starting student loan repayment can feel stressful, especially when you’re asked to enter highly sensitive information like your Social Security number, date of birth, home address, bank details, and sometimes parent information. The safest move is simple: make sure you’re dealing with your actual loan servicer or the official federal student aid website before you enter anything. Federal Student Aid says you can find your assigned federal loan servicer by logging in to your account and checking the “My Loan Servicers” section on your dashboard, or by calling the Federal Student Aid Information Center directly.

Why does it matter which student loan provider you use?

Student loan accounts hold the kind of data scammers love. That includes your Social Security number, financial details, and login credentials. The U.S. Department of Education’s Office of Inspector General warns that fraudsters target borrowers by pretending to offer loan help, forgiveness, or repayment assistance in order to steal money, personal information, or both.

This is not a minor problem. In one case highlighted by the FTC, a student loan debt relief operation allegedly tricked borrowers into paying more than $16.7 million in illegal upfront fees, even though real federal student loan help is available for free through official channels

How do you find your real student loan servicer?

If you have federal student loans, start at StudentAid.gov—not from a random email, text, or search ad. Federal Student Aid says your dashboard will show the company assigned to handle billing and repayment for your loans, along with contact information. If you can’t log in, you can call the Federal Student Aid Information Center at 1-800-433-3243 for help.

If you have private student loans, go directly to the lender or servicer listed on your statements or credit report. The CFPB says borrowers should understand who services their loans and how repayment works before sending payments or sharing account information.

What are the signs a student loan website might be fake?

Watch for these red flags:

  • The site is not on a verified government or known servicer domain. Federal Student Aid reminds borrowers that official federal student aid sites use .gov.
  • Someone asks for an upfront fee to help manage, consolidate, or forgive your federal student loans. Federal Student Aid says your servicer helps you for free.
  • A caller or website pressures you to act immediately or says you’ll lose eligibility if you wait. The FTC says urgency is a common student loan scam tactic.
  • You are asked to share your FSA ID. Federal Student Aid and the Department of Education’s OIG both warn you should never share your FSA ID with anyone.

How can you verify a student loan payment site before entering information?

Use this quick checklist:

  • Type StudentAid.gov into your browser yourself instead of clicking a link in an email or text.
  • Confirm the web address starts with https and belongs to your known servicer or the government.
  • Check your servicer’s name on your Federal Student Aid dashboard before creating an account anywhere else.
  • If something feels off, stop and call the official number listed on your dashboard or on StudentAid.gov.

What should you do after you find the right provider?

Once you’ve confirmed the correct servicer:

  • Create your account only on the verified provider’s site.
  • Turn on any available security features, including multi-factor authentication if offered.
  • Save the official site as a bookmark so you do not rely on search results every time.
  • Ignore paid “help” offers for services your servicer already provides for free

When you’re setting up student loan payments, the biggest cybersecurity win is making sure you’re on the right site before you type a single piece of personal information. Start with StudentAid.gov, verify your servicer, avoid anyone asking for fees or your FSA ID, and only use official contact information. That extra minute of verification can help protect both your money and your identity.