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What is a college loan?
There are many different types
of education loans. Learn about federal and private education
loans so that you can find the right loan to help pay for your
education.
Federal education loans
Federal programs are the single largest source of college
loans. The two primary programs are the Federal Family Education
Loan Program (FFELP) and the William D. Ford Federal Direct
Loan Program (FDLP). The loans available through these programs
start with the same terms; however, in the FFELP, your bank,
credit union, or school is the lender, and in the FDLP, the
U.S. Department of Education is the lender.
Listed below are some of the more widely used federal education
loans.
Federal Perkins Loans.
Federal Stafford Loans.
Federal Parent Loans for Undergraduate Students (PLUS).
Private college loans
Private college loans are also available from a variety of
sources to provide supplemental funding when other financial
aid does not cover costs. These loans are not sponsored by government
agencies, and are offered by banks or other financial institutions.
Federal and private loans are offered as a package from a single,
convenient source.
Other private supplemental loans are available and in some cases
are tailored to specific courses of study. Some examples include:
LAWLOANSSM.
MBA LOANSSM.
MEDLOANS.
Signature Student Loans
Types of federal student aid
PLUS LOANS (LOANS TO PARENTS)
What are PLUS Loans?
The college loans your parents can take out to pay for your education
expenses if you?re a dependent undergraduate student enrolled
at least half time. Also, your parents must have no adverse
credit history. As is true for Stafford Loans, there are FFEL
PLUS Loans and Direct PLUS Loans. PLUS Loans are unsubsidized.
Q) Can my parents get both a Direct PLUS Loan and a FFEL
PLUS Loan for me?
They can apply for either a Direct PLUS Loan or a FFEL PLUS
Loan, but not for both for you during the same enrollment period.
Your parents could, however, apply for a Direct PLUS Loan for
you and a FFEL PLUS Loan for one of your siblings, for example.
Q) How do my parents apply?
For a Direct PLUS college loans, your parents must complete a Direct
PLUS Loan application and promissory note, contained in a single
form that you get from your school?s financial aid office.
To obtain college loans, your parents
must complete and submit a PLUS Loan application, available
from your school, lender, or your state
guaranty agency.*
After the school
completes its portion of the application, it must be sent to
a lender for evaluation.
Although it's not a requirement, parents are encouraged to have
their dependent children file a document, so their children can
receive the maximum student aid they're eligible for.
Q) Are there any borrowing requirements my parents have
to meet?
Yes, generally they have to pass a
credit check. If they don't pass, they might still be able
to receive a college loans if someone, such as a relative or friend
who can pass the credit check, agrees to endorse the loan
and promises to repay it if your parents don't. Your parents
might also qualify for a loan if they don't pass the credit
check if they can demonstrate that extenuating circumstances
exist. For them to borrow for you, you must meet the general
eligibility requirements for federal student aid, and your
parents must also meet some of these general requirements.
For example, they must meet citizenship requirements or be
eligible no citizens
and may not be in default
or owe a refund to any FSA program.
Q)
Do
they need to find a lender?
Not if they borrow under the Direct College Loan Program, because their
lender will be the U.S. Department of Education. Your school
assists the federal government in administering the Direct Loan
Program by distributing the loan application, processing the
loan, and disbursing the loan funds.
Under the FFEL Program, your parents will need to find a participating
lender. For help, they should contact your school or the guaranty
agency* that serves your state. For your state agency?s address
and telephone number, and for more information about borrowing,
your parents can contact the Federal Student Aid Information
Center at the address or toll-free number listed on the web
page. A directory of guaranty agencies is also available at
this U.S. Department of Education Web site: www.ed.gov/Programs/bastmp/SGA.htm
NOTE: Your school can refuse to certify your parents? loan application,
or can certify a loan for an amount less than they would otherwise
be eligible for, if the school documents the reason for its
action and explains the reason to your parents in writing. The
school?s decision is final and cannot be appealed to the U.S.
Department of Education.
Q) How much can my parents borrow?
The yearly limit on a PLUS college loans is equal to your cost of attendance
minus any other financial aid you receive. For example, if your
cost of attendance is $6,000 and you receive $4,000 in other
financial aid, your parents could borrow up to?but no more than?$2,000.
Q) Do they get the money or do
I?
Either the U.S. Department of Education (for a Direct PLUS Loan)
or your parents? lender (for a FFEL PLUS Loan) will send the
loan funds to your school. Your school might require your parents
to endorse a disbursement check and send it back to the school.
In most cases, the loan will be disbursed in at least two installments,
and no installment will be greater than half the loan amount.
The funds will first be applied to your tuition, fees, room
and board, and other school charges. If any loan funds remain,
your parents will receive the amount as a check or in cash,
unless they authorize the amount to be released to you or to
be put into your school account. Any remaining loan funds must
be used for your education expenses.
Q) Can my parents cancel the loan if
they change their minds, even if they?ve signed the promissory
note agreeing to the loan?s terms?
Yes. Your school must notify your parents in writing whenever
it credits your account with college loans funds. This notification
must be sent to your parents no earlier than 30 days before,
and no later than 30 days after, the school credits your account.
Your parents may cancel all or a portion of their loan if they
inform your school within 14 days after the date your school
sends this notice, or by the first day of the payment period,
whichever is later. (Your school can tell you the first day
of your payment period.) If your parents receive PLUS Loan funds
directly by check, they may refuse the funds by not endorsing
the check.
Q) What's the interest rate on PLUS
Loans?
The interest rate could change each year of repayment but does
not exceed 9 percent. For July 1, 2002 to June 30, 2003, the
interest rate for PLUS Loans in repayment was 4.86 percent.
Interest rates are adjusted each year on July 1. Your parents
will be notified of interest rate changes throughout the life
of their loan. Interest is charged on the loan from the date
the first disbursement is made until the loan is paid in full.
Congress changed the interest rate calculation for college loans
made on or after July 1, 1998. If your parents had PLUS loans
first disbursed before that date, the interest rate might be
different. For interest rates on a FFEL Stafford college loans, your
parents should check with their lender. For interest rates on
a Direct Stafford Loan, they should check with the Direct Loan
Servicing Center (see web page).
Q) Other than interest, is there a
charge to get a PLUS Loan?
Your parents will pay a fee of up to 4 percent of the college loans,
deducted proportionately each time a loan disbursement is made.
For a FFEL PLUS Loan, a portion of this fee goes to the federal
government, and a portion goes to the guaranty agency to help
reduce the cost of the loans. For a Direct PLUS Loan, the entire
fee goes to the government to help reduce the cost of the loans.
Also, if your parents don?t make their loan payments when scheduled,
your parents may be charged collection costs and late fees.
Q) When do my parents begin repaying a PLUS Loan?
Generally, repayment must begin within 60 days after the final
loan disbursement for the period of enrollment for which you
borrowed. There is no grace period for these loans. This means
interest begins to accumulate at the time the first disbursement
is made. Your parents must begin repaying both principal and
interest while you're in college.
Q) How do my parents pay back the loan?
For Direct college loans, your parents can choose the
Standard, Extended, or Graduated Repayment Plan. The Income
Contingent Repayment Plan is not an option for Direct PLUS borrowers.
A Direct PLUS Loan can also be consolidated.
For FFEL college loans, parents can usually choose the Standard,
Extended, Graduated, or Income Sensitive Plan. FFEL PLUS Loans
can also be consolidated.
Q) Are there any tax credits available
for paying back these loans?
Yes, there are tax incentives for certain higher education expenses,
including a deduction for student loan interest for certain
borrowers. This benefit applies to federal and nonfederal loans
taken out to pay for postsecondary education costs. The maximum
deduction is $2,500 a year. IRS Publication 970, Tax Benefits
for Higher Education, explains these credits and other tax benefits.
You can find out more by calling the IRS at 1-800-829-1040.
TTY callers can call 1-800-829-4059.
Q) Is it ever possible to postpone
repayment of a PLUS Loan?
Yes, under certain circumstances, your parents can receive a
deferment or forbearance on their loan, as long as the loan
isn?t in default.* Deferment and forbearance are explained,
by clicking here. Generally, the conditions for eligibility
and procedures for requesting a deferment or forbearance that
apply to Stafford Loans also apply to PLUS Loans. However, since
all college loans are unsubsidized, your parents will be charged
interest during periods of deferment or forbearance. If they don?t pay the interest as it accrues, it will be capitalized.
Q) Can a PLUS Loan be discharged (canceled)?
Yes, under certain conditions. A discharge releases your parents
from all obligation to repay the loan.
Your parents? college loans can't be canceled because you didn't
complete your program of study at your school (unless you couldn't
complete the program for a valid reason because the school closed,
for example), you didn't like the school or the program of study,
or you didn't obtain employment after completing the program
of study.
College loan consolidation programs allow for a borrower's loans
to be paid off and a new consolidated loan created.
These programs simply loan repayment by combining several types
of Federal college loans into one new loan. The interest rate
may be lower than on one or more of the underlying loans. Additionally,
the monthly payment amount on a consolidated loan is usually
lower and the amount of time to repay may be extended beyond
what was available in the separate loan programs. These features
generally result in more manageable debt and should make borrower's
less likely to default on the loan.
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