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By Matthew C. Keegan
October 3, 2006
Six years after starting school your
son or daughter has a Master’s degree from a top notch university such as
Brown, Duke, or Gonzaga. Years of hard work and reaching for their best has
paid off as your offspring has landed a plum position with a research company
in the Dallas area. That $50,000 per year starting salary certainly is
competitive but your adult child has one big problem: student loan debt in the
neighborhood of $106,000! Yes, school is done but much debt remains; enough so
that it could take a full 20 years to retire his or her obligations.
Nobody wants to be saddled with too
much debt, unfortunately many university graduates are faced with that
proposition. Eventually, additional types of loans will need to be considered
including loans for a new car or a first home; having student loan debt on top
of it all of that can make it very difficult to make payments on that new car
or house.
Author Information:
Copyright 2006 – For additional information
regarding Matt Keegan, The
Article Writer, please visit his
blog for wit, quips,
and freelance writing tips.
There are some options you need to know about at this point in the student
loan repayment game. These options include:
A Direct Consolidation Loan – Yes, chances are your adult child’s
student loans are through a variety of lenders making it difficult to juggle
different payment due dates throughout the month. Thankfully, you can
consolidate these loans into one payment to just one lender saving the hassle
of sending out multiple payments throughout the month.
Variable Repayment Plans – Unlike the standard student loan, borrowers
can elect to repay their students loans by choosing a variety of repayment
plans. If you consolidate your loan through the U.S. Department of Education,
you have as many as four repayment plans available to you. These plans
include: a standard repayment plan where your repayment amount stay fixed for
ten years; an extended repayment plan where the monthly bill is lower but the
repayment period is longer from 12 to 30 years; a graduated repayment plan
where you have 12 to 30 years to repay your loan and where payments bump up
every two years; and an income contingent repayment plan that is based upon
your salary and can be spread out for as long as 25 years.
Of course, former students must know that if they choose a
student loan
consolidation loan at any time during their 180 day grace repayment period
that starts upon their graduating from school, then the repayment on the
consolidated student loan must begin at once. Therefore, if you are
considering consolidating your loans you may want to time it so that you are
either ready to make your first payment ahead of time or have the consolidated
loan kick in after your grace period has expired. Yes, you may have to make
payments to a variety of lenders until that happens, but once the consolidated
student loan has been approved then you will only have to make one monthly
payment.
So, who is eligible for a government student loan consolidation? Well, if you
have at least one Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) or Direct Loan that is
in its grace, deferment, repayment, or default status than you are eligible
for this type of loan. In addition, you can consolidate a PLUS loan, a Perkins
loan (provided that you also have a direct loan or FFEL loan too), and you can
even consolidate some health profession loans.
Finally, in many cases you are allowed to change your repayment plan options
as time goes by. Perhaps the standard repayment plan was working well for you,
but you since married and had a child. You may find that mortgage payments are
putting enough of a squeeze on your finances, therefore an income contingent
repayment plan may be the best choice for you at this time. Regardless, you
have some options available to you when you select a direct consolidation
loan, options that several different student loans may not have made available
to you.
So, should you consider consolidating your student loans? That answer is “yes”
if you are looking for more options than what you have available to you now
and you are looking to save money, reduce your hassles, or extend your
repayment period. Please visit the U.S. Department of Education’s student loan
site at LoanConsolidation.Ed.Gov to learn more about the options which are
currently available to you.
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