What You Should Know About Student
Loan Forgiveness Programs
Two-thirds
of students who receive bachelor's degrees leave college with debt in tow.
Depending on the amount owed (the average among borrowers is $26,600), it can
take decades to pay off the outstanding balance.
For help
with paying down your student loans more aggressively, consider the many
programs that reduce your debt in exchange for relocating to specific regions
and/or providing needed services in underserved communities. From Kansas to
Chad, and in fields from nursing to teaching, there are programs to help
graduates slash college debt. But the programs aren’t always easy to get into
-- nor easy to stick with. Here are nine things you should know:
1. There are
two broad categories of loan-forgiveness programs. You can enroll in the
federal government's Public Service Loan Forgiveness program and/or apply for a
loan repayment assistance program (LRAP) run by an organization or state. Know
the differences: Public Service Loan Forgiveness requires you to make ten years
of monthly payments toward your loan via an income-based repayment plan while
working in a qualified public-service job before the remaining balance will be
canceled or "forgiven." To qualify for one of the income-based repayment
plans, you must have high debt relative to your income.
An LRAP, in
contrast, tends to require dedicated service to a specific organization for a
relatively short period of time in exchange for a limited amount of loan
forgiveness.
2. You can
double-dip. You can join an LRAP such as AmeriCorps or the Peace Corps and
receive loan-forgiveness benefits at the end of your program (after one year
for AmeriCorps, two for the Peace Corps), and you can count your time as
eligible employment toward the ten-year public-service requirement for the
federal government's Public Service Loan Forgiveness.
3. Only
federal loans are eligible for forgiveness in most of these programs. Few
programs allow their money to go toward private loans.
4. You
should apply early. Start assessing programs before the beginning of your
senior year. Deadlines vary, but Teach for America accepts submissions through
February 20, and the rolling application process for AmeriCorps takes about six
months. The Peace Corps requires more records and medical clearance, so aim to
submit your application seven to 12 months before you hope to start working.
5. It's a
big commitment. In most of these programs, you'll spend two years working to
serve the greater good -- teaching in Detroit's struggling schools, improving
agricultural practices in Senegal or providing mental-health services in rural
Minnesota. Some programs, such as AmeriCorps Vista and the Peace Corps,
explicitly prohibit you from holding another job while you participate in the
program. Usually, you'll have the option to extend your work in the program
beyond the two-year term, which tends to reap even more loan-repayment help.
6. Yes,
you'll earn a salary. In addition to the partial (or sometimes full) payoff of
your loans, most LRAPs provide a small stipend (Teach for America is the
highest, with a maximum salary of $51,000) and health benefits.
7. There’s
no partial credit. If you don't fulfill the entire commitment, you won't earn
any money toward paying off your student loans. You might even face penalties
from employers such as the National Institutes of Health research program and
Nurse Corps if you breach your contract. In 2010, 12.4% of TFA teachers left
the program after the first year.
8. You'll
pay taxes on the loan-forgiveness awards. AmeriCorps, for instance, awards a
lump sum equal to the largest Pell Grant you could receive ($5,645 in 2013).
You won't actually receive a check, but you can make payments toward your loan
directly from your profile on the AmeriCorps Web site. You have seven years to
apply the award. Any amount you use is considered taxable income that year. For
example, a young adult in the 15% tax bracket who applies $5,645 in
loan-forgiveness awards toward a loan will trigger $847 in taxes due the
following spring.
9. You may
not get accepted. Most programs accept only 15% to 30% of their applicants,
with Teach for America and the Nurse Corps Scholarship Program taking even
fewer candidates. Other programs aren't as restrictive: Kansas's Rural
Opportunity Zones relocation program, for example, awards a maximum of $15,000
for living in one of 50 rural counties for five years and simply requests proof
of a degree from an accredited college or university and an outstanding student-loan
balance.
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