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Managing Student Loans 101

This informative session will cover the financial aid landscape, types of loans, loan servicers, repayment plans, deferment and forbearance options, discharge, forgiveness, and cancellation. Attendees will learn about loan history, federal and private student loans, and how to access the National Student Loan Data System.

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Managing Student Loans 101

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  1. Managing Student Loans 101 Basic Understanding of the Repayment Process Ray Ceo 4/19/18

  2. Agenda • Financial Aid Landscape • Loan Servicers • Loan Basics • Repayment Plans • Postponing Repayment: Deferment & Forbearance • Discharge, Forgiveness, & Cancellation • Delinquency, Default, & Collections

  3. Financial Aid Loan History What are the types of loans the student received? • Private Student Loans • Federal Direct Student Loans • Federal Direct Parent Loans • Federal Perkins Loans

  4. Borrower Loan History • Federal Student Loans vs. Private Student Loans How many Students actually know the total balance of their student loans?

  5. Student’s Loan History may include Private Student Loans that may: • Require payments while they are still in school • Have variable interest rates, some greater than 18% • Not be subsidized. • Require an established credit record. The cost of a private student loan will depend upon the student’s credit score and other factors • Need a co-signer • Not be consolidated into a Direct Consolidation Loan • Not offer forbearance or deferment options • Not offer a loan forgiveness program 5

  6. Student Loan History The National Student Loan Data System (NSLDS): • Is a centralized national database • Stores information on federal grants and loans (no private student loans) • Shows how much aid they have received • Displays the student’s current enrollment status Access NSLDS using your FSA ID at www.nslds.ed.gov

  7. NSLDS: Home Page

  8. Loan Basics

  9. Current Federal Student Loan Types

  10. Types of Federal Loans • Federal Direct Subsidized Loans (SUB) • Federal Direct Unsubsidized Loans (UNSUB) • Federal PLUS Loans (FPLS) • In the Past…. • Family Federal Education Loan Program (FFEL) 1994-2010 • -Federal Stafford Subsidized Loans (FSLP) • -Federal Stafford Unsubsidized Loans (FU) • Guaranteed Student Loan Program (GSL) -Supplemental Loan for Students (SLS) • Federally Insured Student Loans (FISL)

  11. Campus Based Federal Loan Programs • Perkins Loans (Perk) (Ending 2017-18) • National Direct Student Loans (NDSLP) - 1965 • National Defense Student Loan (NDSL) - 1958

  12. Loan Servicer • Collects payments on a loan • Responds to customer service inquiries • Processes deferments and Cancellations • Performs other administrative tasks associated with maintaining a loan on behalf of a lender If the student is unsure of who their federal student loan servicer is, they can look it up on studentaid.gov/login

  13. Federal Loan Servicers

  14. Interest – Simple Daily Interest • The “simple” in “simple daily interest” means that interest does not compound unless there is a specific reason for it to do so • The “daily” in “simply daily interest” means that interest accrues every day • Let’s walk through the calculation to determine how much interest accrues in one day on a $10,000 loan with an interest rate of 4.66% (Interest Rate ÷ Days in Year) × Outstanding Principal Balance (0.0466 ÷ 365) × $10,000 = $1.27

  15. Interest Rate for Federal Loans

  16. How Payments are Applied • First payment based on standard repayment plan: • $10,000 loan • Interest rate: 4.66% • Monthly payment amount: $104.41

  17. Repayment Plans

  18. Repayment Plans – FFEL and DL • Traditional plans: • 10-Year Standard • Extended • Graduated • Extended Graduated • Consolidation Standard • Consolidation Graduated • Income-driven plans: • Income-Based • Income-Contingent • Pay As You Earn

  19. Types of Repayment Plans

  20. Standard Repayment Plan Under this plan, the borrower will pay a fixed amount that ensures they pay their loan(s) in full within the repayment period. Payments will be at least $50 per month. For subsidized, unsubsidized, and PLUS loans, the repayment period is 10 years. For consolidation loans, the repayment period is 10-30 years, depending on the borrower’s total educational indebtedness. For borrowers who do not have consolidation loans, this plan results in the lowest total interest paid because the repayment period is shorter than it would be under any of the other repayment plans.

  21. Extended Repayment Plan Under this plan, the borrower will pay a fixed or graduated amount in an amount that will ensure that they pay their loans(s) in full within 25 years. Fixed payments will be at least $50 per month. Graduated payments will be at least the amount of interest that accrues in a month. A borrower may choose this plan if: • He or she did not have an outstanding balance on a FFEL Program or Direct Loan as of October 7, 1998 or on the date they obtained a student loan after that dateand • He or she has more than $30,000 in outstanding FFEL Program loans or more than $30,000 in outstanding Direct Loans.

  22. Graduated Repayment Plan Under this plan, the borrower will pay an amount that increases every two years and ensures that they pay their loan(s) in full within the repayment period. For subsidized, unsubsidized, and PLUS loans, the repayment period is 10 years. For consolidation loans, the repayment period is 10-30 years, depending on the borrower’s total educational indebtedness. The minimum payment equals the amount of interest that accrues monthly. No one payment will be more than three times greater than any other payment.

  23. Loan Consolidation • One lender and one monthly payment • Flexible repayment options • Reduced monthly payments • Fixed interest rate • Subsidized, unsubsidized, PLUS loans for graduate or professional students, Perkins Loans, and certain health profession loans made by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services are eligible for consolidation Note: Private loans are NOT eligible for federal loan consolidation but can be used to establish the repayment period on consolidation loans.

  24. Consolidation: www.StudentLoans.gov • Interest rate is weighted average of consolidated loans • Interest rate is rounded to nearest higher 1/8 of 1% • No interest rate cap

  25. Income-Driven Repayment Plans PAYE REPAYE IBR ICR 10 % of 15 % of 20 % of discretionary discretionary discretionary income income income 10 % of discretionary income 12- year standard Capped at 10- Capped at 10- year standard year standard payment adjusted based amount amount on income

  26. Income-driven – Pay As You Earn (PAYE) The Pay As You Earn Repayment Plan helps keep your monthly student loan payments affordable, and usually has the lowest monthly payment amount of the repayment plans that are based on your income. Payments are generally 10% of discretionary income. • Advantages of Pay As You Earn • The government will pay the unpaid interest on subsidized loans for up to three consecutive years if the monthly Pay As You Earn payment does not cover the monthly accrued interest • Limitation on capitalized interest – interest that accrues but is not covered by your loan payment will not be capitalized, even during deferment or forbearance, except in rare circumstances—and even then, only up to 10% of the initial loan balance • Any remaining principal and interest will be forgiven after 20 years of qualifying repayment • Pay As You Earn payments count for Public Service Loan Forgiveness • Disadvantages of Pay As You Earn • More interest paid over the life of the loan • To continue reduced payments under Pay As You Earn, a borrower must submit updated information on income and family size each year • Only Direct Loans are eligible for the Pay As You Earn Repayment Plan • Only available to new borrowers as of October 1, 2007, who receive a Direct Loan on or after October 1, 2011 • Unpaid portion may be discharged with possible tax liability

  27. Income-driven – Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) A repayment plan for Direct Loans only that bases a borrower’s monthly payment on discretionary income and loan amount. Payments are the lesser of 20% of discretionary income or a percentage (based on income) of what the borrower would pay on a 10-year standard repayment plan. • Advantages of ICR • Limitation on capitalized interest – interest that accrues but is not covered by your loan payment will be capitalized annually, but only up to an amount equal to 10% of your initial loan balance • Any remaining principal and interest will be forgiven after 25 years of qualifying repayment • ICR payments count for Public Service Loan Forgiveness • Disadvantages of ICR • More interest paid over the life of the loan • To continue reduced payments under ICR, a borrower must submit updated information on income and family size each year • Unpaid portion may be discharged with possible tax liability

  28. Income-driven – Income-Based Repayment (IBR) Income-Based Repayment (IBR) is designed to reduce monthly payments to assist with making your student loan debt manageable. Payments are generally 15% of discretionary income. IBR has higher payments than does Pay As You Earn, but usually has lower payments than ICR. • Advantages of IBR • The government will pay the unpaid interest on subsidized loans for up to three consecutive years if the monthly IBR payment does not cover the monthly accrued interest • Limitation on capitalized interest – interest that accrues but is not covered by your loan payment will not be capitalized, even during deferment or forbearance, except in rare circumstances • Any remaining principal and interest will be forgiven after 25 years of qualifying repayment • IBR payments count for Public Service Loan Forgiveness • Disadvantages of IBR • More interest paid over the life of the loan • To continue reduced payments under IBR, a borrower must submit updated information on income and family size each year • Unpaid portion may be discharged with possible tax liability

  29. Are you married? A spouse’s income and loan debt may figure into the calculation, depending on tax filing status and plan choice.

  30. Eligible Loan Programs

  31. Consolidation Loans which Loans received only combined Eligible as student loans received as student Loans Not received Eligible as parent Consolidation Loans which Only eligible combined any for ICR (20%) loans received as parent

  32. Repayment Plan Summary Billy has $40,000 in Direct Loan debt at an interest rate of 6.0%. His income is $35,000, he is single, and he lives in Colorado. His income increases at a rate of 5% per year.

  33. IBR: 25 years REPAYE: IRS: “it’s ICR: 25 20 or 25 years taxable” years PAYE: 20 years

  34. StudentLoans.gov Sign up for IBR, Pay As You Earn, Revised Pay as You Earn or ICR at StudentLoans.gov! 

  35. Estimate your student loan payments Available at StudentLoans.gov.

  36. StudentLoans.gov Click on the right-hand side: “Complete IBR / Pay As You Earn / ICR Repayment Plan Request”

  37. Postponing Repayment - Deferment and Forbearance

  38. Deferment and Forbearance • Postpone making payments • All deferments have eligibility criteria • Most have time limits • Interest does not accrue on subsidized loans during deferments • Interest continues to accrue on Unsubsidized loans during deferments • Some forbearances have eligibility criteria; others are at the lender’s discretion • Interest Accrues on all loans (Subsidized and Unsubsidized) during forbearances • Unpaid interest capitalizes at end • Deferment Time does not count against repayment period

  39. Borrowers may be eligible for a deferment on their federal student loan While they are enrolled at least half-time at an eligible college or career school; (In-School Deferment Request); If they are a parent who received a Direct PLUS Loan or a FFEL PLUS Loan, while the student for whom they obtained the loan is enrolled at least half-time at an eligible college or career school, and for an additional six months after the student ceases to be enrolled at least half-time (Parent PLUS Borrower Deferment Request); While they are enrolled in an approved graduate fellowship program (Graduate Fellowship Deferment) While they are enrolled in an approved rehabilitation training program for the disabled (Rehabilitation Training Program Deferment Request); While they are unemployed or unable to find full-time employment, for up to three years (Unemployment Deferment Request); While they are experiencing economic hardship or serving in the Peace Corps, for up to three years (Economic Hardship Deferment Request); While they are on active duty military service in connection with a war, military operation, or national emergency (Military Service and Post-Active Duty Student Deferment Request); or If they are on active duty military service in connection with a war, military operation, or national emergency, for the 13 month period following the conclusion of that service, or until you return to college or career school on at least a half-time basis, whichever is earlier (Military Service and Post-Active Duty Student Deferment Request).

  40. Deferment & Forbearance Reasons

  41. Discharge, Forgiveness, and Cancellation

  42. Discharge, Forgiveness, Cancellation

  43. Public Service Loan Forgiveness • Borrower must also be employed by a qualifying organization at the time that the borrower applies for and receives PSLF • According to the IRS, the forgiven amount is not treated as taxable income • Details about the program: StudentAid.gov/public service

  44. PSLF – Qualifying Repayment Plan Income-Based Repayment (IBR) Income-Contingent Repayment ICR) Pay As You Earn (PAYE) Revised Pay As You Earn (REPAYE)

  45. PSLF – Qualifying Payments • Multiple, partial payments during the borrower’s monthly billing cycle will qualify if they add up to equal or exceed the borrower’s monthly payment amount • A borrower will not receive credit for more than one payment toward PSLF if the borrower makes a lump sum payment (e.g., makes a single payment equal to two or more full monthly payments) • Exception for AmeriCorps and Peace Corps borrowers who make lump sum payments using education award or transition payment

  46. PSLF – Qualifying Employment Doesn’t matter what the borrower’s job duties are. Borrower can work at multiple organizations while making the required 120 payments

  47. Remember Billy Borrower? He has $40,000 in Direct Loan debt, which has as 6% interest rate. His income is $35,000, he is single, and he lives in Colorado. His income increases at a rate of 5% per year.

  48. PSLF – Employment Certification FLS determines FLS determines FLS determines Borrower FLS has loans Borrower whether how many how many new submits form to transferred to submits another employment qualifying qualifying FLS FLS form qualifies payments made payments made

  49. Delinquency, Default, and Collections

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