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    How to lower your monthly student loan payments

    Many of us know all too well how daunting student loan payments can become especially when times are tight. However, very few of us know anything about our loans at all let alone the options that may be available to help make our repayment plans more manageable. It's time that you get educated about your student loans and take charge of your financial future by learning about your repayment options. Don't default on your loans! The last thing you want is for your higher education to leave you in debt and with bad credit!

    1) Know Your Repayment Options

    When you graduate you are automatically given the Standard Repayment Plan, which has the highest monthly payment but will give you the cheapest loan overall and the shortest payback term, usually 10 years.

    There are several options to lower (not eliminate) your monthly payments. Most federal loans have these options:

    • Graduated repayment: your monthly payments can start as low as interest only and gradually rise as you become more financially stable.
    • Income-sensitive: you choose to put between 4%-25% of your income towards your loan, the percentage paid must at least cover the monthly interest due.
    • Extended repayment: by extending the life of the loan to 25-30 years, you will lower your monthly payments.

    2) Cash flow vs. Overall Cost

    Keep in mind, all of these options will extend the life of the loan. This means you will pay less now, but you will be making payments for a longer period of time. By helping your cash flow now, in the long run, your loan will cost you more money because you will be making interest payments longer. This is not something to stress over! If you need to reduce your payments now, remember - You ALWAYS have the option of going back to a Standard Repayment plan at any time or paying the loan off all at once with no penalty.

    3) The Trick to Private Student Loans

    Typically, private student loans do not offer as many repayment options as federal loans. If you need to lower your payments, take the personal approach: Call your lender and explain your situation.

    Student loan companies would rather have you call them and tell them "I can't pay, what should I do about it?" than have you stop paying altogether. So, if you're having trouble making your monthly payments because they're too high, pick up the phone, call your lender and find out your options. For example, as of June 1, 2009, Sallie Mae is offering a graduated repayment option to students with private loans.

    4) Pay the Principal

    Fab & Fru Tip: A good trick for paying your loan faster without breaking the bank is to add a little extra money each month (or whenever you get a windfall) towards paying off the principal (the original amount borrowed). By adding just a few hundred dollars each year towards your principal payments, you lower your interest payments over time and you will shave several years off the repayment term. This works regardless of what repayment plan you chose or if you're on the Standard Plan.

    To read the full article and get more info on Student Loans and Student Loan Repayment visit Fab & Fru.

    What horror stories do you have about paying back student loans? And what do you know now that you wish you knew then?

     

    17 comments

    • Julie  •  1 year 1 month ago
      I have a private loan thru American Education System. They are the DEVIL! One month after I graduated while hunting for job at my old job I got hurt. I havnt worked since 2007 and been paying interest only. I stared out owing 24,000 now with interest I owe 36,000 and I have called to see if I could get a deferment for just 2 or 3 months because my husband was laid off due to the earthquake in Japan they basically said "hate it for you" My son is 2 and Im saving for his college because the way its looking he will be paying for mine when Im dead! Im so disgusted and disheartend because there is NOTHING you can do. They dont care if you are on your deathbed there not going to do anything for you. Student loans are the worst thing you could ever do to yourself or your child if you allow them to take them out. All we have ever heard is go to school, get an education. With student loan payments higher than house payments your better off to just work in a factory and struggle that way. At least you could have a home. If you have student loan debt you basically are never going to be able to do anything. Trying to better myself just got me screwed without a kiss. Sorry to be so negative but after 3 yrs and no help from AES Im just tired.
    • kerri s  •  1 year 6 months ago
      I think that student Loans are the most horrible kind of debt you can have. It's like there is no help
      put there for anyone who is struggling with the payments .At least with credit cards there are companies that offer to help With Loans they want their money now no matter what your situation is.
    • Jane  •  2 years 4 months ago
      There's also that program where your payments are income based:

      http://personalbudgeting.suite101.com/article.cfm/reduce_student_loan_payments

      Hope that helps.
    • Zero  •  2 years 9 months ago
      I helped my daughter with her student loans, The loans were bought by a company named Sallie Mae. Little did I know, but the intrest is acrued, and the loan will take forever to pay off. Stay away from acrued intrest and do not do business with Sallie Mae.
    • Khalil  •  2 years 9 months ago
      It is time to find solution, hoping to see results among borrowers. At that time we judge it,
    • A Yahoo! User  •  2 years 9 months ago
      They won't help you with private studaent loans until you don't pay them (and ruin your credit)and still might not then. My husband's private student loans have become unmanageable after he lost his job. We tried to call Sallie Mae and all they tell us to do is pay them. How do you pay without any income??? They don't care!
    • Laurie  •  2 years 11 months ago
      Laura, keep calling your loan company. one time you will get a sensitive counselor who will help you. it takes time & perseverance, but it can happen.

      ran into the same problem with my mortgage company. probably took a dozen calls (different days & different times), to finally get someone who was willing to help.

      keep at it & good luck!
    • Ali  •  2 years 11 months ago
      Strongly agree with this article, especially the prepaying comment in #4- I've been doing it as often as possible. If you want to see how much is going towards your principal in the full monthly payment, most MS Excel programs have an "Amortization chart" that will show you how it's split up. (or you can google one and type in the amounts, it will calculate for you) These education loans are out of control! lol
    • JoKTM  •  2 years 11 months ago
      Do I just call and ask what my payments would be under extended repayment? I have $34,000 left to pay on, but I thought you were automaticaly placed on the extended repayment plan after $30,000?
    • Johnna  •  2 years 11 months ago
      I was also the idiot that took out way too many loans while in college and on top of that I went to college for way too long, 6 years of out of state tuition. Needless to say I walked away from school with about $140,000 in student loan debt. I know it's ridiculous. I was naive and didnt read any fine print and went with my parents advice they said I had till the day I die to pay off the loans. We all know that isnt true. I pay $600 a month to Wells Fargo, $375 a month to US Bank and $200 to my federal loans. That is a pretty nice house payment right there. I have called all the lenders to try to make a deal, since my loan payments take about 65% of my monthly income things are very tight for me. I am a 27 year old college graduate with a degree and a "real" job and still live with my parents:( Pretty sad. I have called and tried to make a deal with any of the lenders and no one will budge or is ever willing to work with me. I have been paying all three loans now for almost three years, never missed a payment, and sometimes even pay more than the minimum. I still get no compromise.
      It is very aggrevating because I still have 7 more years of this and unless I get a considerable raise in the near future I will be living with my parents for a long time.......
      I will take the advice of calling the lenders to find out if anyone will work with me, but if anyone has any other advice for me I all ears.
    • LauraC  •  2 years 11 months ago
      I was one of those idiots who chose to take out a private alternative loan while in college and now I'm stuck with a $600 monthly payment on top of my federal loan payment. Needless to say, I'll be lucky if I can scrape enough change together for groceries. I've tried option #3 and called up my lender, but the insensitive b*tch who I spoke with basically told me there's nothing I can do, besides go into forebearance for a year. No thanks.
    • gingerkim  •  2 years 11 months ago
      i owe 16,000 i paid off over 8,000 and i still dont have no damn job student loans suck
    • gingerkim  •  2 years 11 months ago
      i owe 16,000 i paid off over 8,000 and i still dont have no damn job student loans suck
    • Seng  •  2 years 11 months ago
      I hope this will help many students who are involving with student loans. I will post this article in my site so hope I can share it to my network.

      HOLIN
    • Fabulous & Frugal  •  2 years 11 months ago
      JoKTM: Depends if they're federal or private. I believe federal loans remain in the Standard Plan unless you ask for them to be extended. You can probably get an estimate of how much your loan would ends up costing and what your monthly payments would be if you contact your lender. With private loans it's a little trickier because it depends on the terms of the contract.

      jonboncowgirl: What you may try doing is consolidating your private loans under a new lender to see if you can work out a new term and lower the monthly payments. The only lender I know still doing consolidations, though, is Chase Bank. Don't consolidate your federal loans together with your private loans, though. If your federal loans have a fixed interest rate then you can't consolidate them together. If they have a variable rate then you can and it would probably behoove you to do so. The federal government is in charge of consolidating federal loans. If you go here you can find the link to the federal consolidation agency as well as more in depth information http://www.fabandfru.com/?finance/student-loans-part-ii.html . Aside from that, if you have subsidized federal loans it might be a good idea to seek a deferment or forebearance while you bring down your private loans. If your loan is subsidized then it will NOT acrue interest during that time, if its unsubsidized it will. Those are some options you may want to consider. Good luck! If you have any other questions you can email us at comments@fabandfru.com :)
    • A Yahoo! User  •  2 years 9 months ago
      need the student to loan because she like to pay the tuiton fee because the mother no work she like go toschool
    • Perceval Murillo  •  2 years 1 month ago
      I can not recollect, where I about it read.

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