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Interest Rates on Federal Education Loans to Drop July 1
May 29, 2009
If you’re thinking about consolidating your variable-rate federal student loans now — don’t. At least not until July 1, 2009.
Starting in July, the interest rates on these education loans will drop to a historic low — which will save you thousands of dollars in interest over the life of your loan.
But the new rates are only available on federal loans that have a variable interest rate — that means that the interest rate changes every July until you lock in the rate by consolidating. Federal loans that were originated before July 1, 2006 have variable rates.
Interest rates on federal consolidation loans are capped — that means they can never go higher than 8.25%. But, there’s no guarantee that they’ll ever be this low again. In fact, the 2009-10 rates, are the lowest interest rates in the history of the federal student loan program. The previous low was in 2004-05 when in-school/grace period rates on the Stafford loan hit 2.77%.
Borrowers with variable rate loans who consolidate them after July 1, 2009 can lock in these new low rates when they consolidate:
• Stafford Loan Consolidation (In-School/Grace Period): 2.00%
• Stafford Loan Consolidation (Repayment Period): 2.50%
• PLUS Loan Consolidation: 3.38%
Potential Savings
Borrowers who wait until July 1, 2009 to consolidate will save big over the life of the loan.
For example, if you had a $20,000 Stafford loan with standard 10-year repayment plan and a 6.8% interest rate, you could expect to pay $230 a month and $7,619 over the life of the loan in interest.
But, if you locked in the 2% interest rate available after July 1, you’d pay $184 a month and only $2,083 in interest over the life of the loan. That’s a 20% lower monthly payment and total interest savings of $5,536 (73%).
Using the same example, with a 20-year repayment term, you could expect to pay a third less per month and three quarters less in total interest over the life of the loan, a savings of $12,358.
How to Consolidate Your Loans
Since most federally-guaranteed student loan program lenders are no longer consolidating federal education loans, borrowers who wish to consolidate their loans should use the Federal Direct Loan Consolidation program at loanconsolidation.ed.gov.
- Borrowers who have already consolidated their loans cannot take advantage of the drop in interest rate.
- Borrowers with loans originated after July 1, 2006 are not eligible for the new lower rate.
- Private student loans cannot be included in a federal consolidation loan.
- Borrowers who are still in school cannot consolidate their loans until they graduate, as Congress repealed the early repayment status loophole in 2006.
- Borrowers who received prompt payment discounts from their lender will lose those discounts if they consolidate.
- Borrowers who received up-front discounts on their loans, such as fee waivers, may lose those discounts if they consolidate, depending on the terms of the discounts. However, generally the savings associated with locking in the loans at historically low interest rates will outweigh the value of the lost discounts.
- It is not advisable to include Perkins loans in a consolidation loan, as one loses the subsidized interest and favorable forgiveness benefits associated with a Perkins loan if the loan is consolidated. Also, since the interest rate on the Perkins loan is already fixed, there is no financial benefit to consolidating them.
- Likewise, there is no financial benefit to including fixed-rate federal education loans in with variable rate loans in a consolidation loan. However, to the extent that the weighted average preserves the underlying cost of the loans, there is also little harm in including fixed rate Stafford and PLUS loans in with variable rate loans in a consolidation loan. Borrowers may wish to consolidate the loans together to simplify the repayment process.
- There is no requirement that a borrower who consolidates his or her loans switch from standard ten-year repayment to a longer repayment plan, such as extended repayment or the new income-based repayment plan. Some borrowers may choose to use extended repayment to maximize the term of the historically low interest rate. However, if they do so, they should use the reduction in the monthly payment to pay down more expensive debt. Otherwise they are merely increasing the amount of interest they will pay over the life of the loan.


Mark_Kantrowitz
5 months ago
[PatrickB329] Unfortunately, no.
Mark_Kantrowitz
5 months ago
[JohnQ98] Unfortunately, no.
EddieR40
5 months ago
(ponceno11) sorry but I am a little confused about the whole lowering interest rates in July. Does that mean that ONLY the students who started schooling 3 yrs.ago (or before ) will benefit from this? Although is great for them , What about us, the people that are only starting our dreams with higher education ? How can we take a break and get the lower interest rate as well so we can continue to educate and focus ourselves on our education without having the thought of how to repay a high interest loan.Please send me any info about how to get this chance on my side.
Mark_Kantrowitz
5 months ago
[GeorgeM483] 3.38% is the interest rate if older variable rate PLUS loans (from before July 1, 2006) are consolidated on or after July 1, 2009. The rate for new PLUS loans will be 7.9% at Direct Loan schools and 8.5% at FFEL schools.
Mark_Kantrowitz
5 months ago
[MehdiP2] Since you are applying for loans for the first time, you are not eligible for the 2.0% rate. That's only for people with loans from before July 1, 2009. As a medical school student you will receive a 6.8% interest rate on your Stafford loans and either a 7.9% or 8.5% rate on your Grad PLUS loans, depending on whether your school participates in the Direct Loan or FFEL programs.
PatrickB329
5 months ago
My son just took out his first Unsub Staford loan could he refinance that with the new loan process?
JohnQ98
5 months ago
my son will be starting school in fall and we'll need to borrow about $15,000. Do the new low rates
apply to new loans as well?
GeorgeM483
5 months ago
You're indicating 3.38% for PLUS loan consolidation. Is that the interest rate for new PLUS loans?
ShimelisG3
5 months ago
loan description is good and Iwant to invole in it please send to me things that will best
jackflack1234
5 months ago
@WendiM14 -- it would seem I stand corrected on the debt aggregation point, you are correct I was wrong in my earlier post. Mr. Kantrowitz confirms this too.
@Mark -- With due respect. Let's review some of the earliest remarks made here in reponse to your timely article:
- "bent over and taking it"
- "being screwed"
- "govt sucks"
- "with they greedy selfs"
- "this is a big screw you"
- "thanks for nothing government"
These are unconcionable (ridiculous really) statements made by seemly inept self arbiters. These few don't pay attention until they've discovered they should have done something differently. Then they blame the "entity" they perceive to be most culpable in the process (whomever that may be at the time). Then no one calls them to their honor. There is some measure of personal responsibility required in every agreement we enter. These few need to be reminded and you are obligated to play nice.
I'm not emotionally poor sir...I just prefer these folks not look toward our government to solve every one of their banking problems, auto loan problems, mortgage loan problems, insurance bill problems, home electricity bill problems, car payment problems, credit score problems....hmmmm. Sounds familiar.
I'll play nice.
Finest regards, and thanks for your timely article,
Frank
MehdiP2
5 months ago
[Mark kantrowitz] I am a little confused now. I have never had any loans and am now applying for loans for the first time to graduate medical school. So if I wait until July 01, 2009, am I eligible for the 2.00% Stafford (Subsidized and unsubsidized) loans?
Mark_Kantrowitz
5 months ago
[LindaG314] Pursuing more education merely to avoid repaying the loans will just dig you into a deeper hole. It would be better to graduate and use income-based repayment to start paying back the loans. If you have no income, your payment under IBR is zero. But $30,000 in debt can be repaid if you get a job with a starting salary of at least that much. It is only when students borrow more than twice their starting salary that they are at high risk of default.
Mark_Kantrowitz
5 months ago
[MelissaP490] The income-based repayment plan is discussed in a different article. It is best for borrowers with high debt or low income compared with their debt or borrowers who will be pursuing careers in public service. See the article for further discussion.
Mark_Kantrowitz
5 months ago
[lint42] The interest rate you mentioned and the year of graduation are not consistent. While it is possible for her to have a fixed rate if she consolidated her loans, it wouldn't be at 6.8%. I would suggest double-checking the dates and status of her loans with NSLDS, and if there appears to be an error, contact the FSA Ombudsman at the US Department of Education to get the problem resolved.
Mark_Kantrowitz
5 months ago
[clarification] Eligibility for consolidation at the new rate is on a per-loan basis, not a per-borrower basis. So if a borrower has both loans from before July 1, 2006 and after July 1, 2006, the loans from before can be consolidated at the new lower rate while the loans from after are consolidated at their fixed rate. The interest rate on a consolidation loan is the weighted average of the interest rates on the loans being consolidated, rounded up to the nearest 1/8th of a point. The interest rate on each loan is the current applicable rate on that loan -- the new lower rate on the pre-7/1/06 loans, the fixed rate on the post-7/1/06 loans. For example, if you have $5,000 in pre-7/1/06 loans and $10,000 in post-7/1/06 loans, the weighted average is ($5,000 * 2.0% + $10,000 * 6.8%) / ($5,000 + $10,000) = 5.2%. Rounding up to the nearest 1/8th of a point gets you to 5.25%. Your actual rate will vary, depending on the particular mix of loans.