• A report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics found 4% of employers offer student loan repayment.
  • Workers who earn more were more likely to have access to the student loan relief benefit.
  • Meanwhile, the Biden administration is reportedly considering canceling $10,000 in debt for borrowers.

Americans are sitting on $1.7 trillion in student debt, and just a small fraction are getting help from their employers.

As of March 2021, just 4% of all civilian workers were able to access student loan repayment benefits from their employers, according to a new analysis from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. People working in management, professional, and related fields were the most likely to have their employers help chip in on their loans — 7% of workers in that category had access to the student-loan repayment benefit.

Perhaps most stark, though, is which income brackets had the most access to student loan repayment benefits. Among the lowest 10% of workers, only 2% had access to student loan repayment benefits. Meanwhile, 9% of the top 10% of earners had access to a student loan repayment benefit — over four times as much as the lowest earners.

Indeed, the percentage of workers with access to a student loan repayment benefit ticks up as you move across the income spectrum. In simpler terms, the more money you make, the more likely you are to have access to a student loan repayment benefit.

For instance, among the lowest 25% of earners, just 2% had access. Meanwhile, 8% of the highest 25% of earners had access to a repayment benefit. 

Employers offering student loan repayment isn't a new phenomenon, albeit not very common. A survey from SHRM found that 8% of firms offered student loan repayments in 2020, and 1% of respondents said that their employers had actually reduced that benefit.

As Insider's Leo Aquino reports, the CARES Act expanded how much relief employers can give their workers. Under the early-pandemic legislation, employers can put $5,250 in tax-free payments towards their workers' student loans every year. 

While lower-earning workers tend to hold less in average student debt — and hold a lower percentage of debt — those making below $40,000 represent three-quarters of student loan borrowers. Black borrowers also have a disproportionately higher average balance of student loan debt. The left-leaning Roosevelt Institute found that cancelling $50,000 in debt per borrower would help lower-income borrowers more, contradictory to messaging that that amount of relief would mostly benefit high-earners with a large loan burden.

Meanwhile, the Biden administration is reportedly gearing up to cancel $10,000 in student for borrowers who make under $150,000. Some Democrats and advocates have said that's not enough.

"$10k relieves most the people who owe the least," Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez wrote on Twitter. "What relief is there for the most desperate? For them, interest will undo that 10k fast. We can do better."

Read the original article on Business Insider