More than 13,000 people in Ohio and Pennsylvania have been forgiven $105 million in student loans by the Biden administration, according to the White House.

The Biden-Harris Administration has provided a state-by-state breakdown of the nearly 153,000 borrowers around the country who are receiving $1.2 billion in forgiveness under President Biden’s Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) Plan.

The forgiveness includes $60 million in loans to 13,140 Ohioans and $45 million worth of student loan debt to 7,540 Pennsylvanians.

Servicers have started processing the forgiveness, according to the statement.

Borrowers in every state across the country and territories have been notified by email that they will have their loans canceled under the action.

For a borrower to be eligible for forgiveness they must be enrolled in the SAVE Plan, have been making at least 10 years of payments, and have originally taken out $12,000 or less for college.

For every $1,000 borrowed above $12,000, a borrower can receive forgiveness after an additional year of payments.

All borrowers on SAVE receive forgiveness after 20 or 25 years, depending on whether they have loans for graduate school.

The benefit is based upon the original principal balance of all Federal loans borrowed as a student to attend school, not what a borrower currently owes or the amount of an individual loan.

Borrowers who believe they meet the criteria are encouraged to sign up for SAVE at StudentAid.gov/SAVE.