College Cash 101

Pay Off Your Student Loan with Help from Uncle Sam

July 1, 2009 RSS Feed Print

Today could be a day of liberation for millions of college graduates who are struggling with college loan payments. Thanks to the federal government's new Income Based Repayment Plan, which takes effect today, many debtors can cut their payments on their federal student loans to less than 15 percent of their incomes.

The U.S. Department of Education's official site about IBR is a great place to start, but anyone thinking of applying for the program should consider a few details:

Are you married or engaged? Marriage just got more expensive, because the government initially plans to base the new payments on "family income," no matter how much one spouse owes. But Edie Irons, spokeswoman for the Project on Student Debt, says a move is afoot to reduce the marriage penalty sometime next year. In the meantime, she suggests debtors who already are hitched (or plan to wed) see if filing their taxes separately would give them enough debt relief to offset the extra hassle and possible tax expense.

Is there any possibility you will work in any type of public-service job (for any government agency, school, nonprofit, etc.)? If so, consolidate your federal loans directly with the federal government first. Those are the only loans that qualify for public-service forgiveness.

Have you been laid off or had a pay cut? Keep good records. The government plans to base the new loan payments on the income debtors report on their previous year's tax filings. Those who want their payments to be based on current, lower incomes will have to provide documentation. Those who get a new job or a raise should plan on higher payments the following year, as debtors have to reapply for IBR, and document their recent income, every year.

Have you been working in a public-service job and been making your payments for the last year or two? Good news: You might qualify for retroactive credit towards loan forgiveness. Anyone who has worked in a public-service job and been making regular, on-time payments since Oct. 1, 2007, can have those payments counted toward the 120 (or 10 years' worth of) on-time payments that are required for the remainder of the loan to be forgiven under the government's public-service cancellation offer.

Confused by similar-sounding jargon? Watch out. There are several sound-alike programs, including "Income Contingent Repayment" and "Income Sensitive Repayment." Remember: the federal government's Income BASED Repayment is generally considered to be the best deal. 

Hoping for more relief? Alas, the new IBR applies only to federal student loans. So, parents who borrowed to pay for their kids' tuition won't get any help from the new program. And students who took private, signature, or alternative loans from companies like Sallie Mae won't be helped by the new program. The federal government and private lenders generally do offer other payment plans to help strapped borrowers, however. So, if you're having trouble making your payments, it pays to call them and ask for help.

See more on Paying for College.

Tags:
colleges,
student loans,
paying for college

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Contact me at 910 653 4629 to discuss my school loan debt. I am currently paying automatic payments each month.

M

Margie cribb of NC 5:17PM May 27, 2012

very good, it's very useful to me, thank you very much!

rsgoldjw of AL 9:41PM May 15, 2012

sad thing is the government helps every body els but collage students. how about the help he gave to all those companies that were buying jet planes?(JET PLANES) can you imagen the cost of those things? just do the math... how many student could have paid there loans with that money? and all the help he gave to the car dealer companies that were going on trips or what ever they were doing with the money that they missed spent. WHAT ABOUT THESE STUDENTS? That makes me so sad to see how the government just throws away all that money and there are students living out on the street or are tsrogling to pay for the loans. I dont under stand this. do you? what will it take for the government to give these students help???

Diana Garcia of TX 11:42PM May 08, 2012

College Cash 101

Kim Clark, senior writer for U.S. News & World Report, used loans, scholarships, grants, fellowships, savings, earnings, and generous contributions from her family (thanks, Mom, Dad, Grandpa and Grandma!) to fund study at four different universities. She even managed to graduate from two of them. She’s been researching and writing about the best ways to raise college cash for five years. If you’re panicked about paying for college, e-mail questions to collegecash@usnews.com.

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