June 19, 2006
Consolidate Your Student Loans Now Before Rates Rise
By Mary Deibel
Scripps Howard News Service
Students and parents who've borrowed to cover college costs should consider
consolidating their loans by June 30 because interest rates rise 2
percentage points July 1.
The reason: The deficit-reduction act Congress and President Bush OK'd this
year changed the rules for students' Stafford loans and parents' PLUS loans
that include higher fixed interest rates for new borrowing.
"This one is a no-brainer," says Vice Chairman Mark Brenner of College Loan
Corp., a major student lender. "Procrastination is just not an option --
it's time to act now."
Act by June 30 and the current rules apply, so the Class of 2006, other
students still in school and parents can still consolidate loans and lock in
interest rates as low as 4.75 percent during the post-graduate grace period.
As of July 1, new Stafford student loans for students in school or
post-graduate grace and deferment periods will carry a 6.54 percent interest
rate and 7.14 percent interest once they are in repayment. PLUS loans will
carry a 7.94 percent rate.
By College Loan Corp.'s reckoning, the typical student with a $20,500
Stafford loan can save $3,245 by consolidating before July 1.
Patricia Scherschel, vice president of loan consolidation for student lender
Sallie Mae, says a one-day delay past June 30 in notifying a lender could
cause a new grad in the grace period to pay almost 2 full percentage points
more: It's the difference between a $129 monthly payment versus $151 a
month, which adds up to almost $5,000 over 20 years' repayment.
Changes in federal law coincide with a new survey in which 42 percent of
recent college graduates who still carry student-loan debts report "living
paycheck to paycheck."
"Funding a college education isn't just about four years; it's about a young
adult's ability to start a family, buy a house and ultimately, to one day
retire," Richard Davis of AllianceBernstein, the financial services firm
that polled 1,508 grads ages 21 to 35.
The new federal law's other changes, effective July 1, include:
-- STAFFORD LOANS: Effective July 1, 2006, only borrowers who are out of
school can lock in Stafford loan rates.
Before July 1, 2006, recent graduates who want to consolidate Stafford loans
into a single loan can lock in their interest payments at the current 4.75
percent rate through June 30. Scherschel says you need to tell your lender
you will consolidate by then; you needn't have all the paperwork completed.
Outstanding Stafford loans that are not consolidated will continue to carry
variable interest rates that are adjusted each July 1, based on the last
auction in May of three-month Treasury bills. Starting this July, the rate
for Stafford loans during the grace period will go from 4.75 percent to 6.54
percent. For loans outside that post-graduate window, rates on existing
Stafford loans will go from 5.3 percent to 7.14 percent.
-- PLUS LOANS: Parent Loans for Undergraduate Students -- PLUS loans -- let
parents borrow to cover college costs not covered by other financial aid
sources.
Rates on outstanding variable-rate PLUS loans, also adjusted yearly, will be
6.1 percent through June 30 and can be consolidated at 6.125 percent between
now and then.
Outstanding PLUS loans that aren't consolidated by June 30 will carry a 7.94
percent rate for the 12 months starting July 1 and be adjusted every July 1
thereafter until the balance is paid off, based on the last May auction of
three-month Treasuries. PLUS loans carry a 6.1 percent rate through June 30.
Parents needn't have more than one PLUS loan to consolidate but can
consolidate a single PLUS loan, although lenders typically require a minimum
balance before they allow consolidation. Sallie Mae's is $5,000.
-- GRAD STUDENTS: Effective July 1, graduate students will be able to take
out fixed-rate PLUS loans at an 8.5 percent interest rate.
These loans may carry a more favorable interest rate for grad students than
they'd get from a bank or other commercial lender, although parents with
earnings histories and good credit ratings may get better rates from private
lenders.
Student loan advisers agree it pays to shop around when taking out college
loans or looking to consolidate. Student lenders also are offering breaks on
origination fees and other overhead to ease the cost of federal law changes,
so it's smart to comparison shop on this score, too.
For more news and information, go to http://www.scrippsnews.com