All Content from Business Insider 09月17日
学生贷款重启影响Gen Z信用评分,FICO分析显示信用分下降
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FICO最新分析显示,美国人平均信用分下降2分至715分。Gen Z(18-29岁)的信用分平均下降3分,为2020年以来最大年度降幅。这主要归因于通胀、高利率以及学生贷款偿还政策的变化,特别是前总统特朗普时期恢复了逾期学生贷款的催收。Gen Z由于缺乏储蓄、股市及房产增值收益少,且学生贷款负担重,面临更大的财务压力。34%的Gen Z拥有学生贷款,是总人口的两倍。此外,将‘先买后付’(BNPL)纳入信用评分也将对信用分产生影响。特朗普政府恢复逾期学生贷款催收,可能导致借款人面临负面信用报告、工资扣押等风险。新出台的还款计划不如前总统拜登的SAVE计划慷慨,可能导致学生贷款违约率进一步上升。尽管如此,Gen Z仍有通过按时还款和控制余额来提高信用分的潜力。

📉 **信用分普遍下降,Gen Z受影响尤为显著**:FICO分析显示,美国平均信用分已连续两年下降,而Gen Z的信用分下降幅度最大。这与通胀、高利率以及学生贷款政策变化密切相关,Gen Z因缺乏储蓄和学生贷款负担重,财务压力更大。

🎓 **学生贷款对Gen Z信用影响加剧**:Gen Z拥有学生贷款的比例远高于总人口,且特朗普政府恢复逾期学生贷款催收,使得该群体面临信用记录受损、工资扣押等风险。新还款计划可能导致违约率上升。

📈 **新兴支付方式及政策变化的双重压力**:‘先买后付’(BNPL)的纳入信用评分以及学生贷款还款政策的调整,都可能进一步影响信用评分的稳定性,尤其对信用记录较短的Gen Z而言,增加了信用管理难度。

💡 **Gen Z仍具信用提升潜力**:尽管面临多重挑战,Gen Z通过养成按时还款的习惯和有效管理债务,仍有显著提升信用评分的潜力,其信用修复的空间相对较大。

Gen Zers are more likely to feel the financial impact of Trump's student-loan collections restart, according to FICO.

Student debt is hitting Gen Z especially hard.

A new FICO analysis found that the average American's credit score decreased two points to 715 since 2024, down for the second year in a row as Americans grappled with inflation, high interest rates, and changes to student-loan repayment.

The analysis showed that younger consumers, in particular, saw increased financial strains. Gen Zers had an average credit score decrease of three points, marking the largest year-over-year decline of any group since 2020. More broadly, 14.1% of Gen Zers had a 50-point credit score decrease in the last year. FICO defined Gen Z as 18- to 29-year-olds because consumers cannot have a credit report until they are 18.

Credit scores influence a consumer's access to loans like mortgages, and the better the score, the more likely it is that consumers will be able to get loans, rental applications, and higher credit limits approved.

"Gen Z consumers have had less time to build savings, and are less likely to benefit from stock market gains and home price appreciation," the analysis said. "Instead, they are more likely to have affordability issues and more likely to face the impacts of higher interest rates and inflation."

The analysis said that student loans play a significant role in the Gen Z data as well; 34% of the generation have open student loans, double the total population with open student loans.

FICO also announced in June that it would begin incorporating Buy Now, Pay Later loans into credit scores this fall. The analysis said that 29% of surveyed Americans said they relied on those loans to cover income gaps, suggesting credit scores could worsen as BNPL is taken into account.

Some Gen Z student-loan borrowers are entering repayment for the first time, and it coincides with a series of federal policy changes. President Donald Trump's administration resumed collections on defaulted student loans in May after a five-year pause, meaning that borrowers who are delinquent on their student loans are subject to negative credit reporting. They could also default if they continue to miss payments, putting them at risk of wage garnishment and seizure of other federal benefits.

Student-loan delinquencies are at record highs due to the policy changes. The New York Federal Reserve found that 10.2% of student borrowing was in serious delinquency, or more than 90 days past due, in the second quarter of 2025. FICO found that 6.1 million consumers with credit scores had a delinquency added to their records from February to April 2025.

FICO's analysis said that Gen Zers are more likely to face volatility with their credit scores because they don't have long credit histories and are less likely to make payments on time. This puts them at greater risk of facing the consequences of delinquency or default. But it's not all bad — the analysis added that the generation has the most potential for score improvement by learning to make payments on time and keeping balances low.

Along with Gen Z, all federal student-loan borrowers are facing big repayment changes in the coming year. Trump's "big beautiful" bill, which he signed into law in July, eliminated existing income-driven repayment plans and replaced them with two options: a standard repayment plan and a new Repayment Assistance Plan, which allows for loan forgiveness after 30 years.

It's less generous than former President Joe Biden's SAVE plan, which allowed for cheaper monthly payments and forgiveness after as few as 10 years of payments. Trump's bill eliminated SAVE, and the 8 million borrowers enrolled in the plan can either switch to a new plan or remain on SAVE while interest accumulates.

FICO said that delinquencies "could increase even more than anticipated" due to the repayment changes.

"On the other hand, consumers could adjust to the new reality of needing to make student loan payments to prevent wage garnishments, collections, and other negative consequences of not making student loan payments," the analysis said. "This could also potentially impact the payment hierarchy."

Do you have student loans? Share your experience with this reporter at asheffey@businessinsider.com.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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Gen Z 信用评分 学生贷款 FICO 金融影响 Credit Score Student Loans Financial Impact BNPL
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