Is It Wise To Pay My Student Loan Off Early?

No, Because Student Loans Are Special Loans.

Student loans have very cheap debt, in fact; technically you are not actually paying any ‘real’ interest, because the interest rate is set at the rate of inflation. Student loans are one of the cheapest forms of long-term dept possible; by paying them off early you risk needing more expensive borrowing elsewhere at a later date.

Do not confuse official Student Loans with other Student debts. This is only about the official government issued loans taken out while at a University or college, career development loan, professional study loan, or loans for students from your bank or credit union.

When it comes to paying off balances, your first goal should be to pay off your highest-rate, nondeductible debt. Therefore, Mortgage Interest and Student Loan Interest are your so-called “Special Loans” and typically are the last debt you want to pay off.

It makes no sense to speed up paying off low-interest, tax-deductible debt, if you have any other kind of debt at all. Keep these two until the last to help when calculating with Uncle Sam and keeping that cost down.

Would It Make Sense To Put Extra Money Into Savings Versus Paying Off My Loan?

Since there is only so much cash to go around, a decision normally has to be made between paying extra on bills or putting the extra into savings. This can be solved with this statement: If you can earn a higher after-tax return on your investments than the after-tax interest rate expense on your debt, you should invest.

The current top savings account rate is roughly 6.3% interest and is higher than this year’s student loan interest rate of 4.8%. And usually the gap between the savings and the student loan rate is much larger.

You cannot get back the money you passed up or the value of time in helping your money grow. A smart concept is to pay off all high interest loans that you cannot use, make minimum payments on loans where interest you can use and then pay you with the rest.

A friend of mine had an extra $250 and was trying to decide whether to pay off her car loan or fund a Roth IRA. If she used the extra monthly cash to accelerate payments on a $20,000, five-year car loan, she could have it paid off in three years and save an interest of more than $1,000.

In those three years, however, she would have forever missed the opportunity to contribute the maximum of $3,000 annually to a Roth. Those contributions, by contrast, could grow to $78,000 in 30 years. And how many cars would she have to buy over and over and over again in 30 years with nothing to show?

What If All Of This Becomes Just Too Confusing?

Indeed, it is easy to see why financial matters can seem over whelming. American households are staggering under near-record debt loads. We have less equity in our homes and larger balances on our credit cards than ever before.

Bankruptcies continue too hit new highs, foreclosures are setting modern records and a big chunk of our disposable incomes pay for stuff we bought such a long time ago.

This is a time when we are going to hear a lot of advice from family members, neighbors, friends and co-workers. It is best to find a financial advisor who you can trust and who has been in his or her vocation for many years. And also, read, read and read some more to educate yourself (such as this article) on some of the areas that surround us.

How Do I Find The Best Student Loan For College?

The Prospects Of Student Loans

Knowing how to get the best deal on a student loan is ultra important since loans account for 75 percent of all financial aid. Grants only make up for 25 percent. However, student loans are widely misunderstood by both the students and by the parents.

As with most purchasing decisions, you need to shop around among the lenders that are available to you. The best place to start looking is in the state where you live or where your child will be attending school.

College tuition is increasing at an average rate of 7 percent annually. This is well over the rate of inflation and students are borrowing money to pay for their education more and more through student loans. If you think about it, getting at least $50,000 to pay for college (and often times much more) is no easy task for someone who is only 18 to 21 years old.

There are a few students that will have saved or will be lucky enough to have parents who have saved enough for their children’s college education. Also, many students do work their way through college, and hey, why to go! That’s quite an accomplishment.

Where To Start Looking For That Loan

It is best to go straight to the federal loans, per Robert Shireman, who is the director of the Project on Student Debt. Not only do new federal loans have a fixed interest rate, easy to apply for, have flexible repayment terms and often have a government subsidy for part of the interest.

Next go shopping for a Perkins loan, which offers students up to $4,000 a year at a fixed 5% interest rate. It is considered next among equals in the federal loan lineup. The students can defer repayment for nine months after leaving school and spread the payments out over ten years.

Also, graduates who work as teachers or social workers in low-income neighborhoods or who fill other needed jobs may qualify for loan forgiveness. The federal fund that supplies the loans is not being refilled to the full amount as in the past, so if you are lucky enough to be offered a Perkins loan waste no time in accepting it.

After a Perkins loan, it is recommended to apply for a Stafford loan, which is also among the federal financial aid packages. Students may borrow up to $3,500 a year as freshmen, $4,500 as sophomores, and $5,500 as junior and seniors. If your family qualifies for need-based aid, the federal government will pay the interest on the Stafford loan until it comes due.

Students can defer repayment on this loan until six months after graduation and extend repayment from the standard ten years to as many as 25 years and this would lower your monthly payments. However, this would also add to the overall cost of the loan due to the fact that the interest would keep growing.

Something I find rather sad, is that even after having been accepted for both a Stafford loan and a Perkins loan combined, this still will not be enough money to get you through school alone at a private university.

Let’s move on to the next available loan on the list. To cover the gap, after that look to a Plus loan, which is a Parent loan for students. A basic credit check to get this loan must be passed.

Once approved, you can borrow up to the total cost of attendance minus any other financial aid although, the standard Plus loan does require you to start repaying within 60 days of payment. There are some lenders that will allow you do defer repayment until you have left school.

Some Positive Tidbits for Loans

When you start repaying the money, some lenders will give you a break on the interest rate of about a quarter-point if you have the funds automatically withdrawn from your bank account.

If your payments are made on time for the first 24 months, some lenders will forgive origination fees on your loan in excess of $250.

Some lenders will knock two percentages of points off your interest rate for the remaining term of the loan if you pay on time for the first 48 months.

Whatever type of loan you apply for or are accepted for ask them if there are any unadvertised specials by taking out the loan with the lender. Mention the items above; often students are rewarded for a prompt repayment record.