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Your college or university days
may be behind you but if you received federal
student loans from the US Department of
Education (ED) along the way you now have to
deal with paying them back. To avoid repayment
problems it's important to learn how to manage
your student loan debt. One of the best ways is
a government student loan
consolidation.
For starters consolidation allows
you to simplify the repayment process by
combining several types of federal education
loans into one government student loan
consolidation so you make just one payment a
month. The benefit to this is that your new
monthly payment may even be lower than what
you're currently paying.
Typically student loans are paid
over a period of time between 15 and 30 years.
The interest that accompanies these students
loans is variable. The downside to this is that
with a long term plan, in years 15 to 30 you may
end up having to pay significantly higher rates
of interest than you did in years one to 15
since interest rates traditionally rise over
time.
However, a consolidation secures a
student's interest rate. A fixed loan program
means that students can obtain an excellent
rate. For students with high debt, this fixed
interest rate loan can literally save thousands
of dollars in interest payments over the life of
the repayment period.
The Higher Education Act (HEA)
provides for a loan consolidation program under
both the Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL)
Programs and the Direct Loan Program. Under
these programs, a borrower's loans are paid off
and a new loan is created.
Both of these programs simplify
loan repayment by combining several types of
Federal education loans into one new product.
Please note that even if your loans have
different terms and repayment schedules or may
have been by different lenders chances are good
they are still eligible for a consolidation.
And the interest rate on the
consolidation may be significantly lower than
one or more of your underlying loans. Further,
the monthly amount on a government student
loan consolidation is usually lower as the
amount of time to repay may be extended beyond
the terms of your separate loans. The bottom
line is these features should result in a more
manageable student loan debt. Additionally
borrowers are less prone to default.
- You can get a direct consolidation loan,
available from ED, or a Federal (FFEL)
Consolidation Loan, available from
participating FFEL lenders. Under either
program, the loan holder pays off the
existing loans and makes one consolidation
loan to replace them. If you have subsidized
and unsubsidized loans, they'll be grouped
accordingly when you initialize your loan
consolidation so you won't lose your interest
subsidy on the subsidized loans.
There are three categories of direct
consolidation loans: Direct Subsidized
Consolidation Loans, Direct Unsubsidized
Consolidation Loans, and Direct PLUS
Consolidation Loans. If you have loans from
more than one category, you still have only
one direct government student
consolidation loan and make only one
monthly payment.
Under the FFEL Program, you can receive a
subsidized and/or an unsubsidized FFEL
Consolidation Loan, depending on the types of
loans you're consolidating. (FFEL PLUS
Consolidation Loans are included under the
Unsubsidized FFEL Consolidation Loan
category.)
Consolidate
your student loans, as low as
1.625%
Both
FFEL and Direct Consolidation Loans have the
same interest rate, which is a fixed rate set
according to a formula established by law. The
rate is the weighted average rate of the current
rates charged on the loans being consolidated,
rounded up to the nearest one-eighth of a
percent. This means the rate you'll pay won't be
more than one-eighth of a percent more than the
effective rate on your individual loans. The
rate is fixed for the life of the
consolidation.
We've
looked at the pros now lets look at the
cons.
Although
consolidation can simplify loan repayment and
might lower your monthly payment, you should
carefully consider whether you want to
consolidate all your loans. For example, you
might lose some discharge (cancellation)
benefits if you include a Federal Perkins Loan
in a FFEL Consolidation Loan or Direct
Consolidation Loan. If that's the case, you
might want to consolidate only your FFELs or
only your Direct Loans and not your Federal
Perkins Loan(s).
You
also wouldn't want to lose any borrower benefits
offered under your existing non-consolidated
loans, such as interest rate discounts or
principal rebates, which can significantly
reduce the cost of repaying your loans.
Further, you can have a longer period of time to
repay than you do for the individual student
loans you're repaying, but this also means
you'll pay more interest over time.
In
some cases, consolidation can double total
interest expense. If monthly payment relief
isn't a top priority, you should compare the
cost of repaying your unconsolidated loans
against the cost of repaying a government
student loan consolidation.
Once finalized it can't be undone. Bear in mind
the loans that were consolidated have been paid
off and no longer exist.
The
bottom line is that it's best to take the time
to study youroptions before you apply.
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