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Interest Rates on Federal Education Loans to Drop July 1

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.





The Fine Print: Exceptions and Caveats

  • 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.



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    Mark_Kantrowitz

    5 months ago

    [jackflack1234] Please be civil in responding to other commenters. If you can't afford to be polite, then you are very poor indeed. With regard to your loan limit statements, capitalized interest is not counted against the aggregate loan limits. Likewise, interest on unsubsidized student loans will be capitalized during an economic hardship deferment and interest on all loans will be capitalized during a forbearance. This can significantly increase the size of the loan.

  • 2006portraitbsm_max50

    Mark_Kantrowitz

    5 months ago

    [ErikaP322] The interest rates change each July 1, but only on the older variable rate loans. Stafford and PLUS loans issued since then have fixed rates that do not change. With regard to your second question, students who transition directly from undergraduate to graduate school can continue their deferment. It's one of the reasons why there is a six month grace period on the Stafford loans. But you will not be able to consolidate your undergraduate loans with your graduate loans because the graduate loans will be in an in-school deferment status. Only after you graduate from graduate school will you be able to consolidate the graduate student loans. Typically students might consolidate their undergraduate loans after they graduate from undergraduate school, and then consolidate that consolidation loan with the graduate school loans after they graduate from graduate school.

  • 2006portraitbsm_max50

    Mark_Kantrowitz

    5 months ago

    [MatthewE535] Students who have graduated from undergraduate school
    but are intending to go on to graduate school can consolidate their
    undergraduate student loans. Likewise, students who have entered
    repayment on their loans can consolidate them even if they are going
    to return to school in the fall and seek an in-school deferment.

  • 2006portraitbsm_max50

    Mark_Kantrowitz

    5 months ago

    [SabinaU2] Loans orginated after July 1, 2006 do not get the new
    rate. For the 2009-10 academic year, unsubsidized Stafford loans have
    a fixed rate of 6.8% for both undergraduate and graduate students,
    subsidized Stafford loans for undergraduate students have a fixed rate
    of 5.6% and subsidized Stafford loans for graduate students have a
    fixed rate of 6.8%.

  • 2006portraitbsm_max50

    Mark_Kantrowitz

    5 months ago

    [AndreB110] Loans in an in-school deferment cannot be consolidated
    until after you graduate or drop below half-time enrollment. Loans in
    an economic hardship deferment can be consolidated. Note that if you
    consolidate with a different lender you may need to reapply for the
    economic hardship deferment with that lender.

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    lint42

    5 months ago

    I am looking at my wife's current loan situation. She graduated in 2005 using a subsidized (I think Stafford [Direct Loans]) loan with an interest rate of 6.8%. Under "Interest Type" it says "Fixed" but in the article it says "Federal loans that were originated before July 1, 2006 have variable rates" so I am kind of confused if this is a variable loan. She recently started going back to school at the end of 2008 again using the same loan. Can anyone kind of decipher this for me and tell me if I am able to consolidate any part of this loan? I would send her in to talk to people at school but she is currently on bed rest for the last couple weeks of the pregnancy.

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    WendiM14

    5 months ago

    @jackflack1234 While I agree with most of what you are saying, I completely disagree with your statement that interest cannot increase a loan by 50%. Let's take a flat amount of $50,000, loaned after 2006 so it has the fixed 6.8% rate. 50% of $50,000 would be $25,000.

    Put that $50,000 student debt into a standard payment plan and you have a total interest paid of almost $20,000, which is almost 50% right there. This requires a payment of $600 per month. For myself and my husband, it would be $1200 per month - more than my mortgage! And worth much less than my house. Reality check - most people can't afford that. So the average person gets on the extended payment plan. This plan ends up with total repayment of just over $104,000. That is over 100% increase due to interest, not just 50% increase. (And the sad part is, this plan still requires a monthly payment of nearly $350 - $700 for my and my husband - and still very near my mortgage payment).

    The point is, it is very easily possible to increase your student loans by 50% with interest. FYI- these figures came directly from a student loan calculater from a website in your own post.

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    ShelleyD10

    5 months ago

    This is really unfair to people who need to borrow for the upcoming year, or anyone who borrowed after 2006. We are locked into the 6.8% interest rate. The government needs to be fair to be people who need to get these loans now, not just the ones who got them 3+ years ago!

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    BarbaraC246

    5 months ago

    For those of you who would like to contact your government the three sites listed below can give you the information you need. The site for sending a message to the White House is http://www.whitehouse.gov/CONTACT/ . The congressional email directory site is http://www.webslingerz.com/jhoffman/congress-email.html. To find your senator use site http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm

    Good Luck

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    jackflack1234

    5 months ago

    @MelissaP490 - If that question was to me, I wish I could. I'm sorry. No I can't.

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    MelissaP490

    5 months ago

    can you tell us about the pros and cons of the new income-based repayment plan?

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    jackflack1234

    5 months ago

    JackFlack's Back -- All this whining and very little action makes Jack want to throw up his lunch. Some of you have it together. Others, like @ErikaP322 are just out in left field someplace. Anyway I diverge.

    For some of you with extraordinary claims of loan amounts, you can check out the life time loan limits on the SallieMae web site: http://www.salliemae.com/get_student_loan/find_student_loan/undergr...

    You'll notice the undergrad maximum is $57,500. So if you have "Student Loans" with a basis that far exceeds that maximum there is something else going on. Now if you've gone out and gotten private loans you may be confusing your contracts. If that is the case, that just bolsters my earlier points about how clueless _some_ (but not all) of you are about the contracts you sign.

    Next, bounce over to the Federal Student Aid site: http://www.ed.gov/offices/OSFAP/DirectLoan/RepayCalc/dlindex2.html

    Here you can check out the four (4) different repayment methods available to each of you when you actually have to start your repayment. For those of you that actually have a hardship* check out the last two on the list. These two options are totally focused on your ability pay because they zero in on your income. Your repayment is adjusted based upon how much money you actually make.

    While that doesn't give you a free ride, that is a long way from the "shoot all the generals and take over the government" approach.

    Just a thought.

    *hardship = you don't have the unlimited data, text, tv, video, music, and tatoo parlor game on your new blackberry curve or iPhone, you don't have HDTV with 2000 tv channels and don't watch pay-per-view movies, you don't drive a late model BMW, Audi, or even have a car payment, you can barely afford your rent

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    CynthiaM682

    5 months ago

    Is it really a big mistake to go back to school? I have been back for a year now and have a few to go. My loan started in 2008 so I suppose I don't qualify. I am terrified as I don't have much of a job right now, which is why I went back in the first place. Of course there are no guarantees about a future job in my field either. Should I quit before I get in deeper? The comments I read are scary. I'm not sure if I am making my future better or worse?

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    HeatherD439

    5 months ago

    consolidation of student loans

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    FeliciaL122

    5 months ago

    Thank the Heavens..Graduating July 18th... hope this will help ease the pain of student loan repayment