As this presentation reports, student loan debts have grown astronomically. If you graduate owing nearly $30,000 as do many students, this presentation revels several alternatives for managing that debt including loan forbearance, canellation and forgiveness.
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Student loan debts are eating young adults alive
1. Helpful Financial Information from National Debt Relief …
Student Loan Debts Are
Eating Young Adults
Alive
At first glance you might think this is one of those lurid headlined
from some tabloid publication. But it's not. College graduates are
almost literally being eaten alive by their student loan debts. In
fact, it was recently reported that the average college graduate
starts life owing an average of $22,700, which means many of
them owe even more. This might not be a big deal for people
graduating with degrees in areas such as civil engineering
computer science or environmental science but it can be a very big
deal for others. (Continued …)
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2. Helpful Financial Information from National Debt Relief …
The good news
There is some good news if you're graduating this year and have a subsidized Stafford/Direct
Stafford Loan. It’s that you will have a six-month "grace period" before you need to begin
paying interest on that loan. However, you will have to pay at least the minimum amount of $50
a month unless your lender agrees to something else. Your payment won’t be less than the
amount of interest due and payable and you will need to keep on top of that interest. If not, you
will end up paying what's called capitalized interest, which is a fancy way of saying that you'll be
paying interest on your interest.
Loan forgiveness
While most graduates elect to just buckle down and pay off their student loan debts, there are
options. In fact, it's possible to get most of your loan forgiven – meaning that you won't have to
pay off all of it. One way to do this is through Public Service Loan Forgiveness. This is a
program designed to encourage people to work full-time in public service jobs. Under this
program, you would need to have made at least 120 qualifying payments on your loans while
employed full-time by certain public service employers. You would then qualify for forgiveness.
However, the only types of loans that qualify for this program are ones you received under the
William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan program. If you received your loan through the Federal
Family Education Loan Program, the Federal Perkins Loan or any other student loan program
you will not be eligible for Public Service Loan Forgiveness.
What kinds of jobs qualify?
To qualify for Public Service Loan Forgiveness you would need to work for a federal, state or
local government agency, entity or organization or a not-for-profit organization that is tax
exempt. What your job is so doesn’t matter so long as you work for one of these entities.
Loan cancellation
It is also possible to get all or part of your student loan canceled. You could do this by
participating in Teacher Service, wherein you teach full-time in a low-income elementary or
intermediate school for five years. Do this and you should be able to get as much as $17,500 of
your subsidized or unsubsidized student loan debts canceled.
Loan discharge
You can get your student loan debts discharged if you become totally and permanently disabled
and meet other specific requirements during a three-year conditional discharge period. To get
this type of loan discharge you must have a physician's statement that you became totally and
permanently disabled after you got your loan. Your loan may also be canceled if it is discharged
3. Helpful Financial Information from National Debt Relief …
in a bankruptcy. However, this is not an automatic deal. You must prove to the bankruptcy court
that repaying your loan would cause you to suffer undue hardships.
You may also be able to get your loan discharged if your school closed before you were able to
complete your program, if your loan was falsely certified because your identity was stolen or if
your school do not pay you a refund that it owed you under its written regulations or policy.
Loan consolidation
A fourth way to handle student loan debts won't reduce the amount you owe but could make it
easier for you to handle your payments. This is where you consolidate several different student
loans into one new one. This new loan will have a longer term – meaning that you will have
more time to pay back the money. However, so far as interest is concerned there is not much of a
financial benefit to be gained by consolidating student loans. The reason for this is because all
federal student loans have carried the same interest rate since 2006. In the past, you might have
several different loans at several different interest rates so that consolidating them under a new
loan could yield a better interest rate. But today, the main advantage is that you would have a
longer term, which should mean lower monthly payments. Of course, there is a downside to this,
which is that it will take you longer to pay back the money and it will end up costing you more in
interest. As an example of this, if you were to take a 10-year student loan and stretch it out to 20
years, you will end up paying double the interest. But you would cut your monthly payment by
24%, which is certainly nothing to sneeze at.
Consolidating student loan debts into a new loan can be a bit of a gamble. Once you sign for that
new loan your interest rate will be locked in. You could then see interest rates drop dramatically
just a few months later.
Income-based repayment
Another option for paying off your student loans is a program called income-based repayment.
This can be a particularly good option for people who are starting jobs with low salaries. Under
this plan, your monthly payment would be capped as a percentage of your income. This rate is
defined as the difference between your adjusted gross income (that's the amount of money on
which you pay federal taxes) and 150% of the federal poverty level. If you are unmarried and
have no children this comes out to be $16,245
As an example of this, if you were unmarried childless and had an adjusted gross income of
$40,000, your monthly payments would be capped at $365. Of course, if you get a raise this
would mean an increase in your monthly payments. In the event you are not able to pay off the
full amount of the loan after 25 years of payments, your remaining balance would be forgiven.
4. Helpful Financial Information from National Debt Relief …
An important caveat
If you have already started repaying your loan, you could choose to switch to the income-based
repayment plan. However there is an important caveat or downside. If you do this, you will
restart the clock and your new loan will have a term of 25 additional years.
Filing for bankruptcy might or might not help
As noted above, you might be able to get your student loan debts canceled if they are discharged
in bankruptcy. This is where you must prove to the bankruptcy judge that paying your debts
would cause you to suffer an undue hardship. And this is much more difficult done than said. For
most bankruptcy judges to discharge student loan debts you would have to prove that paying as
little as $50 a month would cause you to suffer a really serious hardship. The fact is that very,
very few people are able to convince bankruptcy judges to discharge their student debts.
In the event you need help with your student loans, National Debt Relief has a program that can
provide you with consultation services. Their trained experts can advise you about you student
loan repayment options based on the type of debt that you have and your employment situation.
They will even help you with the paper work involved. This service has a one time fee that will
be placed in an escrow account. When you are satisfied with the service and the documentations
done on your behalf, that is the only time the fee can be released. There is no upfront or recurring
maintenance fee.
5. Helpful Financial Information from National Debt Relief …
Does this sound familiar?
• You are tired of worrying about money…
• You are losing sleep due to mounting credit card debt…
• You are fighting with your partner about the bills…
• You are living paycheck to paycheck…
• You are falling behind on your debts…
• You are losing hope…
It’s time to talk with National Debt Relief!
Go to
http://www.nationaldebtrelief.com/free-student-loans-
quote-now/?src=PDFs
Or Call
1-888-275-4499