Education Loan
Education Loan - Private student
loans
When seeking financial aid or an eduation loan for an online
degree, it's important to know what choices you may or may not
have. While included in the term "financial aid" higher
education loans differ from scholarships and grants in that an
education loan must always be paid back. They come in
several varieties in the United States: Federal student loans
made to students directly: No payments while enrolled in at
least half time status. If a student drops below half time
status, the account will go into its 6 month grace period. If
the student re-enrolls in at least half time status, the loans
will be deferred, but when they drop below half time again they
will no longer have their grace period. Amounts are quite
limited as well. Federal student loans made to parents: Much
higher limit, but payments start immediately
Private student loans made to students or parents: Higher
limits and no payments until after graduation, although
interest will start to accrue immediately. Private loans may be
used for any education related expenses such as tuition, room
and board, books, computers, and past due balances. Private
loans can also be used to supplement federal student loans,
when federal loans, grants and other forms of financial aid are
not sufficient to cover the full cost of higher education.
Education Loan - Federal loans
Another education loan- Federal loans
to students - See Federal Perkins Loan, Stafford loan, Federal
Family Education Loans, Ford Direct Student Loans, and Federal
student loan consolidation.
Federal student loans in the United States are authorized
under Title IV of the Higher Education Act as amended.
The first type are loans made directly to the student. These
loans are available to college and university students and are
used to supplement personal and family resources, scholarships,
grants, and work-study. They may be subsidized by the U.S.
Government or may be unsubsidized depending on the student's
financial need.
Both subsidized and unsubsidized loans are guaranteed by the
U.S. Department of Education either directly or through
guarantee agencies. Nearly all students are eligible to receive
them (regardless of credit score or other financial issues).
Both types offer a grace period of six months, which means that
no payments are due until six months after graduation or after
the borrower becomes a less-than-half-time student without
graduating. Both types have a fairly modest annual limit. The
limit effective for loans disbursed on or after July 1, 2007 is
as follows: is $3,500 per year for freshman undergraduate
students, $4,500 for sophomore undergraduates, and $5,500 per
year for junior and senior undergraduate students, as well as
students enrolled in teacher certification or preparatory
course work for graduate programs. Subsidized federal student
loans are offered to students with a demonstrated financial
need. Financial need may vary from school to school. For these
loans, the federal government makes interest payments while the
student is in college. For example, those who borrow $10,000
during college will owe $10,000 upon graduation.
Unsubsidized federal student loans are also guaranteed by
the U.S. Government, but the government does not pay interest
for the student, rather the interest accrues during college.
Those who borrow $10,000 during college will owe $10,000 plus
interest upon graduation. For example, those who have borrowed
$10,000 and had $2,000 accrue in interest will owe $12,000.
Interest will begin accruing on the $12,000. The accrued
interest will be "capitalized" into the loan amount, and the
borrower will begin making payments on the accumulated total.
Students can choose to pay the interest while still in college;
however, few students choose to exercise this option.
Federal student loans for graduate students have higher
limits: $8,500 for subsidized Stafford and $12,500 (limits may
differ for certain courses of study) for unsubsidized Stafford.
Many students also take advantage of the Federal Perkins Loan.
For graduate students the limit for Perkins is $6,000 per
year.
Education Loan - Federal student loans to parents
Usually these are PLUS loans (formerly standing for "Parent
Loan for Undergraduate Students"). Unlike loans made to
students, parents can borrow much more — usually enough to
cover any gap in the cost of education. However, there is no
grace period: Payments start immediately.
Parents should be aware that THEY are responsible for
repayment on these loans, not the student. This is not a
'cosigner' loan with the student having equal accountability.
The parents have signed the master promissory note to pay and,
if they do not do so, it is their credit rating that suffers.
Also, parents are advised to consider "year 4" payments, rather
than "year 1" payments. What sounds like a "manageable" debt
load of $200 a month in freshman year can mushroom to a much
more daunting $800 a month by the time four years have been
funded through loans. The combination of immediate repayment
and the ability to borrow substantial sums can be
expensive.
Under new legislation, graduate students are eligible to
receive PLUS loans in their own names. These Graduate PLUS
loans have the same interest rates and terms of Parent PLUS
loans.
Parents should also be aware that legislation raised the
interest rate on these loans significantly — to 8.5% on July 1,
2006.
Disbursement: How the money gets to the student or
school.
There are two distribution channels for federal student loans.
The channels are identified by their names: Federal Direct
Student Loans and Federal Family Education Loans. Federal
Direct Student Loans, also known as Direct Loans or FDLP loans,
are funded from public capital originating with the U.S.
Treasury. FDLP loans are distributed through a channel that
begins with the U.S. Treasury Department and from there passes
through the U.S. Department of Education, then to the college
or university and then to the student. Federal Family Education
Loan Program loans, also known as FFEL loans or FFELP loans,
are funded with private capital provided by banking
institutions (i.e., banks, savings and loans, and credit
unions). Because the FFELP loans use private capital as their
source, students who use FFELP loans are able to take advantage
of payment options that are similar to those available to
customers who take out a home loan or a consumer loan. For
example, some institutions will allow a discount for automatic
payments or a series of on-time payments. In 2005,
approximately two-thirds of all federally subsidized student
loans were FFELP.
According to the U.S. Department of Education, more than
6,000 colleges, universities, and technical schools participate
in FFELP, which represents about 80% of all schools. FFELP
lending represents 75% of all federal student loan volume.
The maximum amount that any student can borrow is adjusted
from time to time as federal policies change. A study published
in the winter 1996 edition of the Journal of Student Financial
Aid, “How Much Student Loan Debt Is Too Much?” suggested that
the monthly student debt payment for the average undergraduate
should not exceed 8% of total monthly income after graduation.
Some financial aid advisers have referred to the 8% level as
“the 8% rule.” Circumstances vary for individuals, so the 8%
level is an indicator, not a rule set in stone.
Education Loan - Private student loans
These are loans that are not guaranteed by a government agency
and are made to students by banks or finance companies.
Advocates of private student loans suggest that they combine
the best elements of the different government loans into one:
They generally offer higher loan limits than direct-to-student
federal loans, ensuring the student is not left with a budget
gap. But unlike to-the-parent government loans, they generally
offer a grace period with no payments due until after
graduation. This grace period ranges as high as 12 months after
graduation, though most private lenders offer six months.
Private student loan types
Private loans generally come in two types: school-channel and
direct-to-consumer.
School-channel loans offer borrowers lower interest rates
but generally take longer to process. School-channel loans are
'certified' by the school, which means the school signs off on
the borrowing amount, and the funds for school-channel loans
are disbursed directly to the school.
Direct-to-consumer private loans are not certified by the
school; schools don't interact with a direct-to-consumer
private loan at all. The student simply supplies enrollment
verification to the lender, and the loan proceeds are disbursed
directly to the student. While direct-to-consumer loans
generally carry higher interest rates than school-channel
loans, they do allow families to get access to funds very
quickly — in some cases, in a matter of days. Some argue that
this convenience is offset by the risk of student
over-borrowing and/or use of funds for inappropriate purposes,
since there is no third-party certification that the amount of
the loan is appropriate for the education finance needs of the
student in question.
Direct-to-consumer private loans are the fastest growing
segment of education finance and, as such, a number of
providers are introducing products. Loan providers range from
large education finance companies to specialty companies that
focus exclusively on this niche. Such loans will often be
distinguished by the indication that "no FAFSA is required" or
"Funds disbursed directly to you."
Private student loan rates and interest
Private student loan rates are lower than non-specialized
private loans (e.g., "signature" loans) but slightly higher
than government loan rates. That may be changing, as pending
legislation would raise government student loan rates to
similar rates as private student loans. Consumers should be
aware that some private loans require substantial up-front
origination fees. These fees raise the real cost to the
borrower and reduce the amount of money available for
educational purposes.
Most private loan programs are tied to one or more financial
indexes, such as the Wall Street Journal Prime rate or the BBA
LIBOR rate, plus an overhead charge. Because private loans are
based on the credit history of the applicant, the overhead
charge will vary. Students and families with excellent credit
will generally receive lower rates and smaller loan origination
fees than those with less than perfect credit. Money paid
toward interest is now tax deductible.
Private student loan fees
Private loans often carry an origination fee. Origination fees
are a one-time charge based on the amount of the loan. They can
be taken out of the total loan amount or added on top of the
total loan amount, often at the borrower's preference. Some
lenders offer low-interest, 0-fee loans, but these are usually
available only to those with high credit scores (800 or more).
Each percentage point on the front-end fee gets paid once,
while each percentage point on the interest rate is calculated
and paid throughout the life of the loan. Some have suggested
that this makes the interest rate more critical than the
origination fee.
In fact, there is any easy solution to the fee-vs.-rate
question: All lenders are legally required to provide you a
statement of the "APR (Annual Percentage Rate)" for the loan
before you sign a promissory note and commit to it. Unlike the
"base" rate, this rate includes any fees charged and can be
thought of as the "effective" interest rate including actual
interest, fees, etc. When comparing loans, it may be easier to
compare APR rather than "rate" to ensure an apples-to-apples
comparison. APR is the best yardstick to compare loans that
have the same repayment term; however, if the repayment terms
are different, APR becomes a less-perfect comparison tool. With
different term loans, consumers often look to 'total financing
costs' to understand their financing options.
Eligible loan programs generally issue loans based on the
credit history of the applicant and any applicable
cosigner/co-endorser/coborrower. This is in contrast to federal
loan programs that deal primarily with need-based criteria, as
defined by the EFC and the FAFSA. For many students, this is a
great advantage to private loan programs, as their families may
have too much income or too many assets to qualify for federal
aid but insufficient assets and income to pay for school
without assistance.
Additionally, many international students in the United
States can obtain private loans (they are ineligible for
federal loans in many cases) with a cosigner who is a United
States citizen or permanent resident.
The terms for alternative loans vary from lender to lender.
A common suggestion is to shop around on ALL terms, not just
respond to "rates as low as..." tactics that are sometimes
little more than bait-and-switch. Examples of other borrower
terms and benefits that vary by lender are deferments (amount
of time after leaving school before payments start) and
forbearance (a period when payments are temporarily stopped due
to financial or other hardship). These policies are solely
based on the contract between lender and borrower and not set
by Department of Education policies.
Federally subsidized consolidations are not available for
alternative student loans, though several lenders offer private
consolidation programs. Borrowers of privately subsidized
student loans may face the same restrictions to bankruptcy
discharge as for government based loans: New legislation makes
clear that these loans are, like federal student loans, not
dischargeable under bankruptcy. Even before the legislation was
passed, however, private student loans that were guaranteed 'in
whole or in part' by a nonprofit entity are non-dischargeable
in bankruptcy (and most private loans, regardless of the
lender, were indeed guaranteed by a nonprofit).
Discharge of student loans
US Federal student loans and some private student loans can be
discharged in bankruptcy only with a showing of "undue
hardship." Bankruptcy Code Section 523(a) determines what loans
can and can not be discharged. The undue hardship standard
varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction, but is generally
difficult to meet, making student loans practically
non-dischargeable through bankruptcy. While US Federal student
loans can be discharged for total and permanent disability,
private student loans cannot be discharged outside of
bankruptcy.
Education Loan - Criticism of US student loan
programs
"In 1997, under intense lobbying from student loan companies,
The Higher Education Act (HEA) was amended, and defaulted
student loans became among the most lucrative and easiest to
collect type of debt. These amendments allow for huge penalties
and fees to be attached to defaulted student loan debt, take
away bankruptcy protection for student borrowers, disallow
refinancing of the debt, and also provide for draconian
collection and punitive measures to be taken against student
borrowers, including wage garnishment, tax garnishment,
withholding of professional certifications, termination from
employment, Social Security garnishment, and others. According
to Harvard professor Elizabeth Warren in a Wall Street Journal
piece by John Hechinger, 'Student-loan debt collectors have
power that would make a mobster envious.'" -loan debt
collectors have power that would make a mobster envious.'"
If you are seeking financial aid for your online degree
consider getting an education loan. Yes they do have to be paid
back but if you cannot get a grant or scholarship then it might
be the way to go.
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