Four Steps to Successful Student-Loan Repayment
You'll normally have a six-month grace period before your first Federal Stafford-loan payment is due. By taking a few simple steps now to prepare for that first payment, you'll ensure that you start off on the right track in repaying your education loans and avoid the consequences of student-loan default.
- Step 1: Know what you owe. Students often underestimate their outstanding college debt. Some fail to maintain complete loan records. Others forget that interest accumulates on their unsubsidized loans while they attend school. Your lender and school financial-aid office provided information to you about the amounts you borrowed. You should read this paperwork and calculate the total amount you will have to repay. If you have lost track of your paperwork, use the National Student Loan Data System Student Access Web site to find your loan
provider's name and contact information.
- Step 2: Determine how much you can afford to pay each month. If you've already been hired for your first job, you should know your starting pay. If you're still looking for employment, consult the campus placement office about starting salaries for jobs in your field or consult the Bureau of Labor Statistics Web site.
To determine an affordable monthly student-loan payment, use our table. Education lenders generally recommend that student-loan
payments not exceed 8 to 10 percent of the borrower's gross monthly income.
For example, if your starting salary is $25,000, generally you can afford
monthly student-loan payments of no more than $167 to $208.
- Step 3: Choose a repayment strategy. You have four repayment options from which to choose. Approximately 90 percent of Stafford-loan borrowers use the standard-repayment plan. Use our loan-repayment calculator to estimate your payments under various repayment options.
You also might consider loan consolidation, which bundles multiple loans into a single monthly payment and, depending on your total education debt, extends the repayment period.
You should
select the plan that provides a monthly payment that you can afford but also
pays back the loan as quickly as possible. The longer you take to pay off your
loan, the more interest you will pay. In fact, you may prepay your loan
principal at any time, without penalty, to reduce your interest costs. If none
of these options provides payments you can afford, you should ask your
lender or loan servicer about deferment or forbearance provisions, which allow
temporary suspension or reduction of monthly loan payments.
- Step 4: Keep in touch.
Students who move following graduation should notify their school and their lender or loan servicer of any change in their address and telephone number. Otherwise, you might not receive important information about your student-loan account. Borrowers who fail to notify their school or lender of address changes may incur additional charges for missed or late payments and risk severe penalties for student-loan default.