New Rules on Federal Student Loans
Whether
you're taking out a federal student loan or entering repayment, get up to speed
on these five changes to the federal loan program.
1. Loans get
pricier.
The rate on
subsidized Stafford loans — the federally sponsored loans available to students
with need — jumps from 3.4% to 6.8% on July 1, barring a last-minute (and
unlikely) save from Congress. Despite the headlines, there's no reason to
panic. The rate applies only to new loans, not those that are outstanding, and
it doesn't necessarily mean your payments will soar, says Mark Kantrowitz, of
Edvisors.com.
At 6.8%, a
$5,500 Stafford loan repaid over ten years (the standard schedule) would cost
about $9 more per month, or about $1,000 more over the life of the loan. Not
surprisingly, the hit becomes bigger the more you borrow. On the maximum amount
available in subsidized Staffords for undergraduates — $23,000 — you'd pay
about $40 more per month, or $4,600 over the ten-year repayment schedule.
2. Interest
starts sooner.
The feds
have always picked up interest on subsidized Staffords while students are in
school, but until recently, interest was also deferred during the six-month
grace period before new grads have to start repaying student loans. Now, the
interest on subsidized Stafford loans starts the moment grads hit the real
world — but the change applies only to loans issued between July 1, 2012, and
July 1, 2014, after which the grace period is scheduled to go back into effect.
This year's
crop of grads will likely have a combination of loans that gain interest during
the grace period and those that don't. A $3,500 loan at a 6.8% interest rate
(assuming rates double) will accumulate $120 in interest during the six-month
period.
3. Grad
students lose a break.
As of July
1, 2012, graduate students no longer have access to subsidized Staffords, which
means they lose the in-school deferral on interest for those loans. They can
still get unsubsidized Staffords, which carry a 6.8% fixed rate and are
available to all students who apply. Unsubsidized Staffords start accruing
interest from the time they are disbursed, but repayment can be deferred until
six months after graduation.
4. PLUS
borrowers face a higher hurdle.
Graduate
students — as well as parents — can also get PLUS loans, which carry a 7.9%
fixed rate. You can borrow the full cost of attendance, minus financial aid.
Unlike Stafford loans, PLUS loans require underwriting — and those standards
have tightened up. To qualify, recipients cannot have an "adverse"
credit history, which includes bankruptcy and has lately expanded to include
unpaid collection accounts and charge-offs.
You can
appeal a denial by providing extra documentation, such as proof of a repaid
loan or divorce records showing you're not responsible for the debt, or by
finding an endorser. The endorser takes a risk and must be willing to pay the
loan in full if you do not. Undergraduates whose parents are denied a PLUS loan
are eligible for up to an additional $4,000 to $5,000 in unsubsidized Stafford
loans per year. Those who are denied PLUS loans are unlikely to qualify for
private loans.
5. Repayment
plans get more generous.
One of
several repayment options, Pay As You Earn, became available to borrowers at
the end of December 2012 and improves on the income-based repayment program. As
with the earlier plan, Pay As You Earn pegs the amount you pay to your
discretionary income (the amount by which your income exceeds the poverty
line), but it lowers the percentage of income you pay from 15% to 10% and the
number of years over which you pay from 25 to 20 years. At the end of that
period, any remaining amount is forgiven. To qualify, you must have taken out
your first federal student loan after September 30, 2007, and received a
disbursement from at least one loan after September 30, 2011. Only Direct Loans
are covered.
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