Financing a College Education
A primer for parents and grandparents.4/24/2018
education planning
A university education can often require financing and assuming debt. If your student fills out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) and does not qualify for a Pell Grant or other kinds of help, and has no scholarship offers, what do you do? You probably search for a student loan.
A federal loan may make much more sense than a private loan.
Still, federal loans have borrowing limits, and those limits may seem too low. A freshman receiving financial support from parents may only borrow up to $5,500 via a federal student loan, and an undergrad getting no financial assistance may be lent a maximum of $57,500 before receiving a bachelor’s degree. (That ceiling falls to $23,000 for subsidized direct loans.) So, some families take out private loans as supplements to federal loans, even though it is hard to alter payment terms of private loans in a financial pinch.1,2
You can use a student loan calculator to gauge what the monthly payments may be.
When must your student start repaying the loan?
What if your student cannot pay the money back once the grace period ends?
An unemployed borrower can request deferment of federal student loan payments. A borrower can also request forbearance, a deferral due to financial emergencies or hardships. Interest keeps building up on the loan balance during a forbearance, though.1
At the moment, federal student loans can be forgiven through two avenues. The first, the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PLSF) program, requires at least 10 years of public service, government, or non-profit employment, or at least 120 student loan payments already made from the individual. The second avenue, income-driven repayment plans, first lowers the monthly payment and extends the payment timeline based on what the borrower earns. If the balance is finally forgiven, the loan forgiveness is seen by the Internal Revenue Service as taxable income. (If you have student loan debt forgiven via the PLSF, no taxes have to be paid on the amount.)1,3
Consult financial aid officers and high school guidance counselors before you borrow.
Lastly, avoid draining the Bank of Mom & Dad.
talk to a Vermillion Financial Advisor today.
Need help planning your retirement? Have you saved enough to live your desired lifestyle in retirement?
Call Now Request Appointment (COMPLIMENTARY, NO-OBLIGATION, INITIAL CONSULTATION)