Stafford Student Loan News

A blog about Stafford student loan news and information. A publication of the Student Loan Network.

04.09.09 | Death & Permanent Disability Benefit

Posted in Federal Loans, PLUS Loans by dbonvie

It’s not something that any of us want to think about, but it is a sad realty of life. If you take out a Stafford loan and something happens to you where you wind up permanently disabled or worse, the entire amount of the loan is forgiven.

I know when I was 18 I didn’t pay much attention to this fact, but when I went back to school at 30 with a wife and child I read the fine print. The last thing I wanted to do was put them in a bad situation if something unforeseen happened to me.

For a Parent Plus loan (which is a loan a parent takes out on behalf of the student), the forgivness extends to them as well in the event of death, but not in the case of permanent disability of the student for whom the parent borrowed the money for.


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10.24.08 | Stafford Loans hold Tax Benefits

Posted in PLUS Loans, Repayment by Stafford Loan Experts

Friday Fun Fact!

Did you know there are tax incentives while paying back your federal student loans? Most can claim the interest on their taxes. This benefit applies to all loans used to pay for post-secondary education, including PLUS loans.

The IRS publication 970, Tax Benefits for Higher Education explains these benefits in greater detail. You can also contact the IRS at 800-829-1040 with additional questions.

05.16.08 | Good News for Parents

Posted in PLUS Loans by Lee Anne Hannula

Starting with the 2008-2009 school year, the Federal Parent Plus Loan can now be deferred until 6 months after the child’s graduation. This is a big change, because typically Parent Plus loans were due immediately upon disbursement. This will help a lot of parents out who are trying to help their children to pay for College, but cannot afford the monthly payment while the student is in school. This also helps the parents who plan on having the child repay the loan when they are done.

Remember, that Parent Plus loans are the parent’s responsibility for the life of the loan. There is no way to switch the loan to the students name when the student is done (short of taking out a private loan to pay it off, which I don’t recommend).

Also, I am asked quite frequently if the Plus loan can be used to living expenses….if the student is living off campus. The answer to that is, IF the school agrees to it, then yes. They are the ones that certify the actual amount of the loan. Check with the school, and explain to them what you need the money for…this way the loan will be disbursed, and most of it will go towards tuition that is due, then the remainder would go to the parent or student to help with living expenses.

If you need a PLUS loan for this upcoming school year, and your child knows what College they are attending, apply for this loan NOW…every day lenders are dropping out of this loan program, due to an ever changing student loan industry…so its best to get your paperwork in now.

05.07.08 | New Parent PLUS Loan Limits

Posted in PLUS Loans, Repayment by Stafford Loan Experts

Via NASFAA:

Beginning July 1, 2008, HR 5715 passed by Congress will allow parents to choose to defer payments on a PLUS loan until six months after the date the student ceases to be enrolled at least half time. Accruing interest could either be paid by the parent borrower monthly or quarterly, or be capitalized quarterly.

Special Provision for Parents Delinquent on Mortgage Payments

The bill would allow lenders to consider parents eligible for PLUS loans even if, during the period January 1, 2007, through December 31, 2009, the parents are or were:

* No more than 180 days delinquent on a mortgage payment on their primary residence

* No more than 180 days delinquent on any medical bill payments

* No more than 89 days delinquency on the repayment of “any other debt”

03.20.08 | Unintended consequences of Stafford Loan rate changes

Posted in Federal Loans, Interest Rates, PLUS Loans by Stafford Loan Experts

As far back as 2001, Congress, looking at incredibly high interest rates on federal student loans (8.25% statutory maximum on the Stafford loan, 8.5% on the PLUS loan) decided to legislate a mandatory fixed rate of 6.8% on Stafford loans beginning July 1, 2006. At the time, it seemed like a good idea to legislators to try “fixing” market prices. Prior to that legislation, Stafford and PLUS loans had variable rates of 2.3% and 3.1% + the 91-day Treasury Bill rate at the last auction in the month of May.

Fast forward to today - 2008. With the economic uncertainty, the 91-day Treasury Bill’s current rate is a shockingly low 0.21% (as of noon 3/20/08). If Stafford loan rates were still variable rate loans and rates were set today, the Stafford loan would have a variable rate of 2.51% - lower than student loan interest rates have ever been. For students now paying 6.8%, a rate of 2.51% would mean paying about $50 less per month on $20,000 in federal student loans. Had Congress also left student loan consolidation alone (not reducing subsidies to lenders, thereby reducing availability of consolidation loans to students) that same rate change would mean paying 56% less interest for the life of the loan.

This is a lesson for all of us - when government attempts to manage free markets, unintended consequences may result, and those consequences may be financially quite harmful in the long term.

08.02.07 | Time Machine

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How many times have you uttered these nine words to yourself, “If I only knew then what I know now.” If you’re south of the legal drinking age, probably not often, but as father time marches on you gain new perspective.

I can tell you unequivocally that I wanted to hop into a Delorean, hit 88 mph, and go back in time to save me from myself on several occasions. I would have saved myself thousands on student loan repayments. Actually, who am I kidding, I would have placed a few choice wages on sporting events while I was back in time and became wealthy enough to pay my way thru school, but I digress on my fantasy adventures. My aim today is to have you eliminate those aforementioned nine words from your vocabulary as it pertains to student loans.

So let’s pump those 1.21 gigiwats of electricity thru the flux capacitor and get you where you need to go. Just follow my 6 easy steps below and you can’t go wrong.

  1. Complete your Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) (this application is sent to the Department of Education). Please note, if you do not have a pin number you will need to request one at www.pin.ed.gov
  2. You will receive a Student Aid Report (SAR) which will be sent to both you and the school(s) you list on your FAFSA (up to six schools max) within 5-7 business days.
  3. The school will send you an Awards letter outlining the financial aid you are qualified to receive. Financial aid which includes grants, scholarships, and federal loans.
  4. If you qualify for a Stafford Loan you will need to find a lender to fund your loan. You can go to http://www.staffordloan.com/ and one will be assigned for you. We make it easy!
  5. If you are a dependent student who needs additional funds for school you may have your parent apply for a parent plus loan. If they get accepted for the loan that would obviously be great, but if they get declined for any reason you will be qualified for additional Stafford loan funds. You can take that denial letter to your financial aid department.
  6. If you do not qualify for a Stafford loan than you may wish to explore private student loan options. You can visit ActEducationLoans.com for more details regarding undergraduate private student loans.

So now that you’re back from the future, what is your game plan? Will you travel down the road of uncertainty like so many others before you? Will you navigate the course I have outlined? Regardless of choice one thing is certain, “Roads, where you’re going you don’t need roads.”

10.25.06 | Graduate School - how to pay?

Posted in PLUS Loans by Monique Leonard, Student Loan Network

Here is an article talking about the difficulties paying for graduate school. I think it wonderfully shows the need for the new Graduate PLUS loan that began this year. The PLUS loan has lower, fixed rates as compared to private loans with higher, variable rates. In the long run, they cand save graduate student thousands of dollars.

Read the whole article here.

Graduate students seek loans as last resort for expenses

Wednesday, October 25, 2006
By Joe Smydo, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Lofton Durham has borrowed $20,000, worked during the summer and relied on his wife’s income to help make ends meet while doing his graduate work in the University of Pittsburgh’s theater department.

Yet he said the master’s and doctoral programs — six years of study in all — would have been unaffordable without the teaching fellowship and tuition waiver the department awarded him.

“My funding runs out in April ‘09, and that’s when I hope to be finished,” said Mr. Durham, 33.

Graduate and professional students have a fabled beg-borrow-or-steal existence. Mostly, worrisome research shows, they borrow. And most borrow more than Mr. Durham.

Because of the intensity of instruction and expensive lab work, graduate and professional programs cost more per year than undergraduate school.

Yet federal and state grant programs that assist undergraduates typically aren’t available to graduate students. Mom and dad may be tapped out after college, or unwilling to help finance the next leg of a child’s educational journey

The type of aid awarded to Mr. Durham is highly competitive and unavailable to most. Graduate and professional schools offer a limited number of assistantships, fellowships or work-study slots.

So, many of the nation’s growing number of graduate students take out multiple loans, perhaps accumulating more debt than they comfortably can handle. Alternatively, debt may dictate the course of a graduate’s career.

“One possible effect of the growth of debt is the declining number of new lawyers who enter government or public-interest jobs. Many of these jobs have starting wages of under $40,000 per year,” said the National Association of School Financial Aid Administrators based on a 2003 survey.

In another study, released this year, researcher Kenneth Redd reported that the cost of graduate and professional education climbed 65 percent from 1995-96 to 2003-04 at the same time the number of graduate and professional students grew by about 250,000.

Savvy students may hunt for special opportunities.

St. Vincent College offers alumni a 15 percent discount on graduate credits, financial aid director Thomas Ball said.

Some universities offer free graduate tuition to employees and their immediate families and have reciprocity agreements with other schools.

And some graduate students — more so in business and law programs than in medicine — go to school part-time so they can pay as they go.

Businesses may pay all or part of employees’ graduate tuition. Shari Payne, director of academic operations at Robert Morris University, said the school bills employers directly.

Still, loans accounted for more than 75 percent of the financial aid for graduate and professional students in 2002-03, the 2003 survey found. Doctoral students were not included.

On average, the study said, a person graduating from a master of arts or science program at a public university in 2003 had combined undergraduate and graduate debt of $24,809.

The so-called “cumulative debt” averaged $30,630 for MBA recipients at public schools, $54,025 for graduates of public law schools and $107,215 for graduates of private medical schools. Graduates of private dental schools had the highest cumulative debt, an average of $144,474, the study said.

Mr. Redd gave another snapshot of borrowing in his study, also for the financial aid administrators association. His study included doctoral students.

It found average cumulative debt of $27,702, $25,063 and $39,045, respectively, for master’s, MBA and doctoral-degree recipients at public schools; $51,230 for graduates of public law schools; and $108,844 for graduates of private medical schools. It did not give figures for dental schools.

Most loans come through the federal Stafford program, which offers $8,500 a year in subsidized loans. It also offers $10,000 a year in unsubsidized loans — the annual limit increases to $12,000 July 1 — to most graduate and professional students. Those in certain health fields are eligible for up to $36,700 of unsubsidized loans in a year.

The government pays interest on subsidized loans during a student’s enrollment; the student pays all interest on unsubsidized loans but may defer payment during enrollment.

The 2003 study found that many students — 16 percent of those at private business programs, 39 percent in private law schools, and lower percentages in other fields — also took out private loans likely to have higher interest rates.

Federal loans fall short of the cost of graduate education.

Researchers noted that “the annual federal student loan limits for graduate and professional programs accounted for only a fraction of the total cost of attendance.”

In 2002-03, a full-time student enrolled in a master of arts or science program at a public university paid an average of $17,207 in “total costs”– tuition, fees, books, supplies, transportation and living expenses, according to the study. It found the highest costs, an average of $56,370, for students at private dental schools.

“Free money” from schools, governments and private sources — whether grants, assistantships, scholarships or tuition waivers — represented 40 percent of the aid for master’s students in arts, science and education and as little as 11 percent in dental schools.

It represented 19 percent of aid for business students; 54 percent, theology; 17 percent, law; 11 percent, dental; and 24 percent, medical, according to the study.

Mr. Redd’s study found that full-time students were more likely than part-timers to receive fellowships, grants, assistantships and tuition waivers.

Undergraduate schools centrally process admissions applications and financial aid packages. In graduate school, those decisions often are made by individual departments and programs.

While various publications rank graduate programs, none offers a comprehensive guide to the free money at each school or the percentage who receive it, said Donald E. Heller, associate professor and senior research associate in Penn State University’s Center for the Study of Higher Education.

Dr. Heller and Patricia E. Beeson, the University of Pittsburgh’s vice provost for graduate studies, said prospective students should speak with faculty to make sure they’re a good fit for a program and assess the likelihood of aid.

Dr. Heller said his department generally admits only as many doctoral students as it can sponsor with assistantships or other help, and Mr. Durham said Pitt’s theater department seems more generous to students in doctoral and master of fine arts programs than students in the master of arts program.

Mr. Durham, who had no loans from his undergraduate days at Transylvania University in Lexington, Ky., said he was stunned by the potential borrowing for graduate work at some schools and recalled thinking, “This is a degree in theater, people. It’s not a law degree or medicine.”

An offer of substantial support from one school immediately can curtail a student’s search for a graduate program. That was the case for Mr. Durham and for Chelsea Oakland, an MBA student at Point Park University who receives a tuition waiver and stipend as a graduate assistant.

“How could you turn down a free education?” said Ms. Oakland, who has no loans from her undergraduate and graduate work at Point Park. Mr. Durham and Ms. Oakland enrolled in graduate school to improve their career options. He wants to teach at a university or be part of the artistic leadership at a large theater; she wants to work for a talent or casting agency.

“Our economy and society are very dependent on the training received by doctors, lawyers, engineers, teachers and other professionals,” Mr. Redd’s study said.

“Shortages of trained individuals in these areas could reduce our economic growth and have other severe consequences for our health and welfare. In addition, the financial barriers to graduate and professional education could have an enormous influence on the racial/ethnic composition of professionals in many fields.”

Conventional wisdom holds that a person risks financial hardship if he or she must use more than 10 percent of gross pay to repay student loans.

The financial aid administrators’ 2003 survey said that among those who left school in that year, average repayments ranged from 7.4 percent of starting salary for some master’s recipients to 16.3 percent for some law graduates.

For some, the alternative to borrowing may be to forego a graduate degree. Mr. Durham said he knew one master’s student in the theater department who had multiple jobs but no free money, and dropped out.

“It would have been a non-starter for me without the tuition waiver,” Mr. Durham said.

10.11.06 | PLUS Loans 101

Posted in PLUS Loans by Monique Leonard, Student Loan Network

Unfortunately with the current cap on Stafford Loans, it is nearly impossible to pay for all of a student’s tuition with just Stafford Loans.

The next step for many families is a PLUS Loan. PLUS Loans are taken out in the name of the parent or guardian, not the student. They are credit-based loans, though the credit requirements are generally much less stringent than housing, auto or private education loans.

Like the Stafford Loan, the PLUS Loan is a federal program, regulated by the government with a fixed interest rate that is capped by Congress. Currently, the PLUS Loan interest rate is 8.5%.

Unlike the Stafford Loan, a PLUS Loan allows you to borrow up to the cost of education (tuition, room & board and school fees) minus any other financial aid such as Stafford Loans, work study, scholarships, etc.

07.17.06 | The Department of Education

Posted in Federal Loans, PLUS Loans by Monique Leonard, Student Loan Network

A lot of people are confused by what’s behind the Stafford and PLUS programs, so I though I’d give a little background information, hoping to make it all a bit clearer. Let’s start with the Department of Education.

The U.S. Dept. of Education began operating in 1980. It’s one of the last items President Carter signed into Law. It’s official acronym is ED, though you’ll often hear Department of Ed or DOE (this last one rightly refers to the Department of Energy, but you’ll hear it for the Department of Education as well).

Unlike the educational system of most other countries, education in the U.S. is not centralized, meaning that the federal government and Department of Education are not heavily involved in determining curriculum or educational standards. The main focus of the Department of Ed is to formulate federal funding programs involving education and to enforce federal educational laws.

So what does this mean to you? The Deptarment of Ed runs the Stafford and PLUS loan programs, which means either you will be dealing with them or you will be affected by them. While some issues, such as the recent rate hike, are decided by Congress, others are decided by the Deptartment of Ed. They can change their policies or their take on federal language independant of Congress. Sometimes this benefits the borrower, sometimes it doesn’t.

That’s the Department of Ed in a nutshell.