Question:
I am a relatively recent college
grad who is trying to get his finances
in order and has a couple of questions
on student loans. I currently have
~$32,000 in student loans (most
of which has been in forbearance
for a year and is scheduled to start
payment in Feb.).
I am looking
at the many different federal student
loan consolidation options and am
noticing that they are all pretty
similar as far as interest rates
and eligibility. Is there a "best"
lender to use or a "best"
deal out there as far as federal
loan consolidation? Is there a website
that lists the various loan consolidation
packages that each lender has to
offer? I have a $32,000 loan and
wanted to try to get a 25 (or possibly
even 30) year re-payment plan but
the longest payment plan I've seen
for my amount of debt is 20 years.
Does anyone
know of a lender that can get me
a longer re-payment term? Also,
from my time in college, I have
a bill on my student account (under
$1000 that was mostly room + board
fees) that is almost 2 years old
and currently in collections. Is
there a way to have this bill consolidated
into my other student loans, or
should I just try and pay it off
now? Are there federal (or federally
insured) loans out there that would
provide me a loan for the purpose
of settling my student account and
then able to be consolidated into
my other loans? I am very
inexperienced in these matters and
have kind of been avoiding dealing
with my debt (obviously), so any
help is very, *very* appreciated.
Thanks!
Answer:
I f you consolidate before payments
kick in, you get a lower rate, but
there is a cut off and you are getting
extremely close to it. Also,
with salliemae, he got a 4 year
lower amount to start off, probably
just interest.
But he can
pay less while he makes less, or
should he do well, he can pay more.
But at least he will
not be strapped with a higher payment
should it take awhile to earn a
good salary.
His consolidation
is at 3.6
Without the
consolidation his payments would
have started in Dec around $159,
now they are starting in Feb about
$76. I
hope you have better luck than I
have with the consolidation options.
I have $22,000 in students loans.
They were all through the same lender.
I don't qualify for any consolidation
programs because I used the same
lender each semester. I *thought*
the responsible thing to do would
be to get all my loans from the
same place. Turns out that if I
had scattered them all over the
country, I could get them consolidated
and the payments would be lowered
from $220/mo to about $150/mo.
You should
still be able to consolidate with
that lender. I found this: 'If a
borrower has multiple FFEL program
loan holders, the borrower may select
any consolidating lender and is
not required to choose a lender
who is the holder of any of the
loans. If all a borrower's FFEL
program loans are with only one
holder, the borrower must check
with the holder for consolidation
first, unless the lender does not
offer income-sensitive repayment.'
So, if the original holder won't
let you consolidate, you should
be able to take your loans and have
them consolidated with another lender?
Unless you've already consolidated,
I'm thinking you should still be
eligible for consolidation actually
that's what I thought.
We had always
dealt with American Express and
so I thought that meant I had the
same lender. But, there were
other types of loans that the school
included that were subsidized and
unsubsidized and I don't understand
it, but somehow it meant we werern't
all from one borrower. I
think the only way you might be
all from one borrower is if the
school didn't have anything to do
with your loan filing and you just
went to the bank and took out a
loan. Contac(this is the
federal government's loan consolidation
program). I highly recommend using
them and no one else. Why? 1)
because you can consolidate if you
have at least 1 loan that hasn't
"officially" been consolidate
- regardless of WHO you obtained
that loan through. 2) because
they will work with ANY repayment
plan - period. If 10-20-30
years are still not long enough
- they have a plan that allows you
to pay what you can afford (called
IRC or something similar) it's based
on your income - and if you have
paid consistently for 25 years (no
deferments, etc) they forgive the
rest of the loan amount. Now,
they check your income every year
and you have to submit a single
form every year to stay on this
plan but it's well worth it! Salliemae
and other companies just can't work
with you as well as the government
can!
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