Paying for College
Digging Out of Student Debt
Don't despair. You have options with private lenders and the feds to cut your payments.
By Jane Bennett Clark, Senior Associate Editor
From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, October 2010
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When Angela Moore looks into her future, she sees checks for $500, $147, $280 and $250 piling up like leaves in a forest. Those are the amounts she could be paying every single month on her four student loans, which total $92,000, for the next several decades. If she postpones payments, the amounts she owes will go up. If she skips them, she could ruin her credit and end up in court.
Moore, 26, graduated with a bachelor's degree from the University of Hartford in 2009 with $25,000 in federal student loans and $67,000 in private loans. She devotes about half of her paycheck to those bills and resorts to credit cards to cover other expenses. Says Moore, the first in her family to graduate from college, "It's heartbreaking to have a college degree and not be able to pay for normal things because I have to pay student loans."
Moore works at an orthopedic surgeon's office, the same job she had in college. She would like to move on someday but can't afford to make less than her current wage of about $18 an hour. Nor does she see an obvious way out of her predicament. "If you're in that much debt and have a house or car, you at least have something you can give back. I have a piece of paper. I have nothing to give back."
Meet the young and burdened. Of borrowers who graduated from four-year colleges in 2008, 10% walked away with $40,000 or more in student debt, almost three times the number of students who borrowed at that level in 2000, according to the Project on Student Debt, an advocacy group. The default rate for students who entered repayment between fiscal year 2006 and fiscal year 2007 was 6.7%, the highest since 1998.
You'd think bankruptcy would be a solution to massive student debt, but for most people, it is not an option. You must demonstrate to a judge that repayment would cause "undue hardship," a term interpreted by some courts to mean the "certainty of hopelessness," according to Deanne Loonin, of the National Consumer Law Center. This strict standard applies to both federal and private student loans. Proposed legislation in Congress would change that standard for private student loans, making them eligible for discharge under the more lenient rules that apply to credit-card and other consumer debt.
Meanwhile, federal loans offer programs that let you reduce payments or even qualify for loan forgiveness. As for private loans, some lenders are offering deals to borrowers rather than see loans go south.
Cut a deal with a lender. A few years ago, lenders were rushing to offer private loans to students, including those who were less than creditworthy. Now, borrowers who couldn't afford the loans in the first place are defaulting in droves, says Joshua Cohen, a Hartford-based lawyer who specializes in debt. "The industry is either going to take a bath or start coming after people."
Some lenders hope to avoid both scenarios by offering interest-only repayments or other arrangements that lower payments for a time. "It does us no good to have a customer with a loan he or she is unable to repay," says Patricia Christel, of Sallie Mae, the giant student-loan company. Check your promissory note to see whether it includes such provisions. "It's very case-by-case," says Loonin. If it does not, try to negotiate a plan with your lender.
If you don't reach an agreement, ask the lender for forbearance, in which you make no payments at all for three-month increments, usually for no more than a year (interest continues to accrue). Lenders are less willing than they once were to sign off on these deals, but they may do so if they believe the break will get you back on track. "The important message is, contact your lender sooner rather than later," says Tim Ranzetta, of Student Lending Analytics.
With federal loans, you can be past due for months before going into default. With private loans, you generally fall into that category as soon as you miss one payment. A collector will start calling, and eventually a third-party collection agency will take over the loan. (The Fair Debt Collection Practices Act protects you from abusive collection practices. See 6 Ways to Fend Off Debt Collectors.)
Unlike the feds, who have the authority to tap your resources, private creditors must go to court to collect debts. "Until then, there's nothing they can do," says Cohen. Defaults are subject to your state's statute of limitations, typically six years. If you do get sued and lose, the creditor can garnish your wages, put a lien on your house and wipe out your bank account.
Pick a plan from Uncle Sam. Federal loans, which include Perkins loans, Stafford loans and Grad Plus loans, provide more options. (The Perkins loan repayment provisions differ somewhat from the other two; call your school for details.) For Staffords and Grad Plus loans, the standard plan gets you out from under after 120 equal monthly payments over ten years. If you can't afford those payments but expect to have a higher income in a few years, you can choose the graduated plan, through which you make lower payments in the first few years and higher payments later over the ten-year span. Because you pay less at the beginning, you pay more interest overall.
If you owe at least $30,000 in federal loans, consider the extended repayment plan, which lets you stretch monthly payments as far out as 25 years, for lower monthly amounts but at a higher cost. Or you can consolidate your federal loans through the federal Direct Loan program and extend your payments to 12 to 30 years, depending on the amount you owe. (For details, see www.loanconsolidation.ed.gov.)
Borrowers whose federal debt outstrips their annual income should look into the income-based repayment plan, which is "like gold" for those who qualify, says Edie Irons, of the Project on Student Debt. This program, which improves on two other income-based programs, can reduce your payments to as low as zero.
You probably qualify if your total debt exceeds your annual income (see the calculator at IBRinfo.org). After 25 years, any remaining debt is forgiven; you owe tax on the forgiven amount. If you enter the income-based repayment plan and then get a big bump in salary, your payments from that point on are calculated according to the standard plan.
Cops, public defenders, public-school teachers and others working full-time in the public sector qualify for cancellation of any remaining debt after 120 payments, made on or after October 1, 2007. To get this deal, your loans must be with the federal Direct Loan program, as opposed to the now-defunct program (known as FFEL) offered by private lenders. You can consolidate FFEL loans into the Direct Loan program. The forgiven amount is tax-free.
You have the right to defer federal-loan repayments for up to three years if you are unemployed, experiencing economic hardship, attending school at least half-time or serving on active duty in the military. The feds pick up the interest during the deferment on subsidized loans but not on unsubsidized loans. Call your lender for details.
If deferment isn't an option, ask your lender for forbearance. With a federal loan, you can suspend payments for up to three 12-month periods. Depending on the amount you earn and owe, you may be legally entitled to this deal. If not, ask anyway: It's in the lender's best interest to give you time to get on your feet. Interest accrues during forbearance.
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Reader Comments (7)
Posted by: Kevin at 09/09/2010 01:55:26 PM
My wife finished undergrad at a California public university with $6K in debt. She went to USC Law School and abroad to LSE for an LLM. Total student loan debt was $220K when we married on 4/12/08 with a weighted average of 6.78% interest. She had a mix of Stafford, Perkins, PLUS, and private variable rate loans. I took control and enrolled our accounts for EDA (electronic debt accounts) giving us a .25% reduction in interest and took advantage of the .25% rate reduction when making 12 consecutive on-time payments with Access Group. For the low rate loans, I switch the payment schedule to either interest-only or extended 25 year repayment (from the standard 10 year track). This brought our monthly obligation from $2,200 down to $1,499. The margin ($701) each month was sent as an extra payment to the loans with the highest interest rate (8.5%). All the extra money we received from saving and generous gifts from my family we applied to the loans with the highest interest. I later consolidated the Perkins loan with the Direct Loans variable loan and got another rate reduction while fixing the Direct Loans at an incredibly low 2.3% interest. On 1/1/10, we whittled the $220K at 6.78% down to $184K at 4.75%. After exhausting all possible methods to save on student loans, I came up with another idea. I packaged our remaining highest rate loans and made a deal with my mom. The packaged loans totaled $76K and had a interest rate of 7.2%. My mom has over $1M in assets and about $400K in cash/CDs. When her CD matured, I offered her a 4% tax-free annual return which was much higher than the 2.5% taxable return from the banks. She paid off our highest lows with the $76K, we'll make annual tax-free "gift" repayments of $12K for the next 8 years. This saved us a ton of money and it's a potentially a great deal for my mom. The only thing is that my mom refuses to accept our money because she's so generous. My point is that you can get creative to beat your interest rates and debt to something reasonable. Currently we owe the institutional lenders about $104K at a fixed 3.6% interest, our monthly obligations is only $580 (down from $2,200, 2.5 years ago). We owe my mom $76K at 4% interest if she ever wants to collect on it. Bottom line, you went to college to learn how to think. Try to use what you learned to think yourself out of debt. Good luck everyone.
Posted by: Roberta at 09/10/2010 09:28:35 AM
I know that people can owe a lot but I have tried to work with the lenders but they want more than you can actually pay and then they keep pushing you to agree to something that you know that you can not afford. What else can you do if you don't have the payment that they want and they keep pushing you?
Posted by: Tom at 09/10/2010 10:15:10 AM
Its somewhat disingenuous for someone from Sallie Mae to talk about the programs they offer to people who can't repay. My wife collected for them for a while and there was a disincentive to enroll someone in a program over collecting a payment. In fact, not being able to afford your loan disqualified you for a forbearance, which doesn't seem to make sense to the consumer (Sallie Mae's reasoning: if you can't afford your current payment, you won't be able to afford it when interest accrues and its higher). Of course different variables apply to everyone's situation, and who was collecting, but I know their target was 80%+ cash, < 20% programs/forbearances. And Kevin, good for you, but I bet most people don't have the opportunity to get $76k at a below market rate loan from family (and then possibly not have to repay anyway!)
Posted by: Kenneth at 09/10/2010 11:49:01 AM
Personally I am appalled at the interest rates loan companies charge for student loans these days, it doesn't matter if they are private or through Stafford. With 1 yr LIBOR at .83, Prime at 3.25 I could not get a private student loan through my bank (which ended up being through Sallie Mae) for my daughter under 9% interest, that's more than 2 3/4 times Prime. I got better loan rates 6.8%, 3yrs ago when Prime was at 5.00. Sallie Mae would not take into account my credit rating of 795 as a cosigner when I looked into it this year and strictly used just my daughters to determine the interest rate. I asked the Sallie Mae rep, "what young student is going to have excellent credit rating" and Sallie Mae rep agreed. I could cosign for auto and mortgage loans for her and get better rates than this.I realize the economic climate is different today, but the loan companies are making up their losses though the sweat of students who have no recourse but to borrow. If they want to make things easier for students, reduce the money their raking in on the interest rates on these huge student loans. Ultimately they will probably make more money because they will have fewer students defaulting. Shame on them, they have a captive audience and they know it.
Posted by: Mimi at 09/10/2010 12:35:37 PM
Similar to previous poster, I borrowed from my father to retire student loan debt @ 0% interest rate. The original amount was 24K private loan and after paying it on my own for 4 years, I was only able to reduce it to 16K (interest rate was variable and I was paying extra on the principal). After paying off some other debts, my husband and I went ahead full steam to return the 16K in less than 4 months to my dad. Now the only obligation we have is our mortage and we get to save my entire paycheck to boost our EF! It was a sweet deal.
Posted by: Shawn at 09/24/2010 09:56:15 AM
Wow, did you miss the story here! The real problem is how and why a young woman like this took out so much loan debt. She's such an extreme case that all she illustrates is the need for more "education" among kids going to college. I went to college with many people who worked very hard to avoid this senario. I know people who took time off to earn money, people who worked nights and weekends and who skipped all the parties. A $92,000 loan balance is ridiculous and avoidable.
Posted by: Frank at 09/24/2010 10:57:30 AM
This article never mentions what type of degree that Angela Moore obtained. Not for nothing, but that's a very relevant piece of information. I'm not saying this is the case with Ms. Moore, but I find it very irresponsible to obtain loans that grossly exceed the earning potential that the degree allows. Sure, perhaps her degree can allow her to earn more than $18/hour, but with $92k in loans, her chosen major should have been either Engineering or Pharmacy, where you can earn $60k+ right out of school. I'd like for Kiplinger to do a follow-up. This story is very similar to one featured on Yahoo about 5 months ago. In that article, the debt-laden graduate obtained a degree with very little earning potential and racked up huge debt in doing so. Very irresponsible.