WATCH: Report says national student debt is over $1.6 trillion
The college student loan balance in the United States is $1.66 trillion, according to a WalletHub report.
To determine the best and worst states with student debt, the WalletHub’s report compared all 50 states and the District of Columbia. WalletHub also graded on a 100-point scale focusing on metrics such as the state’s cost of living, unemployment rates and paid internship opportunities for students.
The state with the most student debt is Mississippi.
The average amount of student loans owed, according to the report, equals 56% of the median income in the state. Mississippi residents hold a total of $17 billion in student loan debt.
Additionally, Mississippi has the 14th-highest default rate of debt, meaning people are having trouble paying the loans they borrow, the report stated.
The report indicates Mississippi has the fourth-worst availability of jobs to students, and the second-lowest share of paid internships, behind Louisiana.
“In a state like Mississippi, they may not have the highest balance, student loan balance per resident, but because it’s such a low-income state, the economy is in pretty poor shape right now, so they’re devoting more of their income towards student loan debt,” WalletHub Analyst Chip Lupo told The Center Square. “Now juxtapose that with a state like, say, California at 49. They have the highest student loan debt, the highest amount of debt, but because it’s a pretty high-income state, residents aren’t allocating as much of their income towards the debt.”
In California, $151.5 billion in student debt is owed by state residents. At the same time, the state has a multitude of grant and loan forgiveness programs.
Following Mississippi, states with the most student debt, with the average amount owed per student, are New Hampshire, $34,860; Pennsylvania, $36,120; Delaware, $38,856, and South Dakota, $31,171.
The states with the least amount of student debt are Washington, with the average student owing $36,709; New Mexico, $34,246; California, $38,300; Utah, $33,872; and Hawaii, with $38,929.
Lupo said the rise in student debt has been a cause of the rise in the cost of tuition, which has doubled in the past two decades.
“I do think that in a lot of states if we shift more of the student loan programs back to the banks, create some more competition, I do think that college would be a little bit more affordable, and students would have a little bit more leeway and maybe not have to borrow as much,” Lupo said.
In recent years, the student loan forgiveness program, strongly advocated by the Biden administration, provided relief for over 5 million borrowers, upward of $190 billion. That is only 11% of the current national student loan debt relieved.
“I think there were all kinds of legal issues involved with the Biden administration’s effort to forgive student loans,” Lupo said. “You can’t erase the debt.”
Latest News Stories
Op-Ed: If Illinois wants clean energy, it needs data centers
Illinois senator’s bill on transgender ‘mental illness’ sparks debate
Lawmaker says Illinois behind 44 states in legislative transparency
Illinois Quick Hits: Foreign national faces harboring, forced labor charges
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Legislative Committee for February 3, 2026
Village to Revise Noise Ordinance Following Trucking Complaints
Health & Safety Committee: Opioid Overdose Deaths Drop to Zero in January as Behavioral Health Department Expands Role
Illinois GOP state reps call on Dems to stop taxing s’mores, other goods
Illinois Quick Hits: Tangent to expand in Montgomery
Retail advocate: Swipe fees ruling is largest Main St. ‘relief package’ in Illinois
Smith & Wesson wins appeal chance in Highland Park lawsuits
Illinois Republicans say federal student data probe may reach Illinois State after Tufts review
Washington Township Trustees Move to Create Official Emails to Comply with FOIA