Here are the most recent, publicly reported updates tied to the Sweet v. McMahon borrower defense settlement (including settlement deadlines and related court actions):
Key latest developments (2026)
- A Feb. 23, 2026 Supreme Court action: the Supreme Court declined to hear a petition that sought to challenge the settlement’s validity, which (per the settlement advocates) effectively leaves the settlement in place.[3]
- A late-March 2026 Ninth Circuit update: the Ninth Circuit unanimously denied the Department’s emergency motion to stay settlement deadlines pending appeal (i.e., the deadlines were not paused).[1]
- After that denial, the next reported item in the timeline is that eligibility/relief notices were sent for certain “post-class” applicants (with a reported relief due deadline extending into 2027).[1]
Next deadlines to watch
- One update source reports a non–“Exhibit C” post-class deadline that passed on April 15, 2026, with relief described as triggering automatically for eligible borrowers.[1]
- The same source flags another notice deadline of June 15, 2026 as an upcoming date to monitor for people who may still need to respond in the relevant category.[1]
Quick context (so the “settlement agreement” updates make sense)
“Sweet v. McMahon” is the borrower-defense settlement connected to certain federal student loan discharge/relief processing obligations, and the recurring news tends to focus on whether the Department can pause or extend court-ordered timelines—and what deadlines apply to different applicant groups.[3][1]
If you tell me whether you’re asking about (a) deadlines for “post-class” borrowers, (b) “Exhibit C,” or (c) whether the settlement is still being legally challenged, I can summarize the most relevant pieces for that specific track.