Student loan forbearance or deferment are popular options for
those who are finding it hard to pay student loans, but borrowers may be
making an expensive mistake when they enroll in one of these programs.
First, here’s a brief overview of the four main income-based
repayment programs. Keep in mind these apply to federal loans, not
private loans. With private loans, you are at the mercy of the lender,
as they aren’t required to offer any of these options.
Your Options to Pay Student Loans
Deferment
While your loan is in deferment, you do not have to make student loan
payments. If you have a subsidized loan, no interest will accrue during
the deferment. With an unsubsidized loan, interest will accrue.
Interest not paid during deferment is “capitalized” which means it is
added to the balance, and interest will be charged on interest.
Forbearance
If you don’t qualify for deferment to pay student loans, you may be
eligible for forbearance, which allows you to make no payments, or
reduced payments, for up to a year. Interest will accrue on your
subsidized and unsubsidized loans (including all PLUS loans) and unpaid
interest will be capitalized.
Income-Based Repayment (IBR)
There are plenty of reasons to take out federal loans in lieu of private student loans, but the Income-Based Repayment plan takes the cake. If you qualify for IBR, your maximum monthly payments will be 15% of
discretionary income, using a specific formula. Under the newer Pay As
You Earn (PAYE) program available to recent borrowers, the cap is 10% of
discretionary income. Payments can be as low as $0 if you are
unemployed. Balances will be forgiven after 10, 20 or 25 years,
depending on the program you are in and whether you work in a qualified
public service job.
With subsidized loans in IBR, the government will pay up to three
consecutive years of interest that accrues but is not repaid. With
unsubsidized loans, interest accrues. In both cases, interest is
capitalized if you are determined to no longer have a “partial financial
hardship,” or if you drop out of IBR.
Who qualifies for IBR?
IBR helps people whose
federal student loan debt is high relative to income and family size.
Currently, your loan servicer (the company you make your loan payments
to) determines your eligibility, but starting in September 2012,
students won’t have to contact their loan servicer to apply—they will be
able to apply directly through the Department of Education’s website,
thanks to a new directive from President Obama.
You can use the U.S. Department of Education’s IBR calculator to
estimate whether you are likely to qualify for the plan. The calculator
looks at your income, family size, and state of residence to calculate
your IBR monthly payment amount. If that amount is lower than the
monthly payment you are paying on your eligible loans under a 10-year
standard repayment plan, then you are eligible to repay your loans under
IBR.
Will my eligibility change if I'm married? What if my spouse also has loans?
If
you are married and file a joint federal tax return with your spouse,
both your income and your spouse’s income are used to calculate your IBR
monthly payment amount.
If you are married and you and your
spouse file a joint federal tax return, and if your spouse also has
IBR-eligible loans, your spouse’s eligible loan debt is combined with
yours when determining whether you are eligible for IBR. If the combined
monthly amount you and your spouse would pay under IBR is lower than
the combined monthly amount you and your spouse are paying under a
10-year standard repayment plan, you and your spouse are eligible for
IBR.
How will enrolling in IBR affect my monthly payments compared to the standard repayment plan?
It
depends on your income. But, take for example a nurse who is earning
$45,000 and has $60,000 in federal student loans. Under the standard
repayment plan, her monthly repayment amount is $690. The currently
available IBR plan would reduce her payment by $332, to $358. President
Obama’s improved “Pay As You Earn” plan -- reducing the cap from 15
percent to 10 percent -- will reduce her payment by an additional $119,
to a more manageable $239 -- a total reduction of $451 a month.
How will enrolling in IBR affect my payments over the life of the loan compared to the standard repayment plan?
In
general, your payments will increase as your income does, but they will
never be more than they would have been under the standard 10-year
repayment plan. Although lower monthly payments may be better for some
borrowers, lower payments may also mean you make payments for longer and
the longer it takes to pay your loans, the more interest you pay
compared to the standard repayment plan.
Is it possible my payments will be higher under IBR than they would under the standard repayment plan?
IBR
will never cause your payments to increase more than they would have
been under the standard repayment plan. It is possible, however, that
your income and the size of your outstanding loan balance may mean that
IBR is not beneficial to you. If your payments would be higher in IBR
than they would be in the standard repayment plan, the IBR option will
not be available to you.
Also, because a reduced monthly payment
in IBR generally extends your repayment period, you may pay more total
interest over the life of the loan than you would under other repayment
plans.
How do I opt in to IBR?
To sign
up for IBR, call your loan servicer. The loan servicer is the company
that sends you your monthly student loan bills. If you don’t know who
your servicer is or would like more information about your loans, such
as the balance and interest rates, you can look it up on www.nslds.ed.gov.
To see a list of and contact information for common servicers of
student loans held by the US Department of Education, you may visit the Loan Servicer page.
What does today’s Presidential Memorandum mean for IBR?
The PM will do three things:
Streamline the IBR application process:
The Department of Education, in collaboration with the Treasury
Department and Internal Revenue Service, will create a streamlined
online application process for IBR that allows student loan borrowers
with federally held loans to import their IRS tax return income data
directly into the IBR application. This process will allow income
information to be seamlessly transmitted so that borrowers can complete
the application at one sitting. Federal direct student loan borrowers
will no longer be required to contact their loan servicer as the first
step to apply.
Enhance online and mobile resources for loan repayment options and debt management: The
Department of Education will create integrated online and mobile
resources for students and former students to use in learning about
Federal student aid, including an explanation of the various options to
cap monthly payments based on income. The Department will also develop
and make available to borrowers an online tool to help students make
better financial decisions, including understanding their loan debt and
its impact on their everyday lives. This tool would incorporate key
elements of best practices in financial literacy and link to students’
actual Federal loan data to help them understand their individual
circumstances and options for repayment.
Increase awareness of IBR:
The Department of Education will instruct Federal direct student loan
servicers to make borrowers aware of the option to participate in IBR
before a student leaves school and upon entering repayment. The
Department of Education will make available for institutions of higher
education a model exit counseling module that will enable students to
understand their repayment options before leaving school and to choose a
repayment plan for their student loans that best meets their needs.
How can I find out more?
Visit www.studentaid.ed.gov or
call 1-800-4-FED-AID. You can also learn more about other student loan
repayment options and find advice on paying loans off more quickly using
the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau's Student Debt Repayment Assistant.
Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR)
Under this plan, borrowers’ monthly payments are pegged to income,
family size and the amount owed. After 25 years, any remaining balance
is forgiven. (Or after 10 years for public service loan forgiveness.)
Accrued interest is capitalized annually.
Short-Term Gain, Long-Term Pain
Deferment or forbearance may seem like a blessing if you are not able
to make your student loan payments, but they may wind up being a curse.
While they may offer a reprieve for someone facing a short-term
financial hardship, they don’t offer long-term relief from overwhelming
debt.
Our reader Robyn explained that she borrowed about $20,000 in student loans:
I worked and paid…paid and worked. Took a couple of forbearance(s).
Upon restarting payment, I had to pay $500.00… Sallie Mae suggested a
consolidation. I did it. Then the loan total rose to $55,000. Interest
$27,000.
“Deferment and forbearance is like putting a Bandaid on a stab
wound,” warns Joshua Cohen, also known as The Student Loan Lawyer. “What
happens in 12 months when that deferment (or forbearance) ends?”
Some of the fault may lie with servicers who find it easier and
faster to push those options instead of IBR. Borrowers may be “pressured
to go into forbearance without even being told about their options,”
warns Lauren Asher, president of The Institute for College Access and
Success. She points to a memo that discussed how three-quarters of
delinquent borrowers whose loans are handled by four large companies
were “cured” by putting their loans into deferment, while only 24% had
made payments on their loans.
That means the majority ended up with at least as much debt as when
they went into default — and quite likely more — if their loans accrued
interest, which is likely as Asher notes that 82% of borrowers with
subsidized Stafford loans also have unsubsidized loans. Our reader D.
Kranz commented on the Credit.com blog:
One thing that would help is if they would stop the capitalization of
interest when the loans are deferred or placed in forbearance… All this
is doing is moving us backwards…Why can’t they waive the interest on
students or even have it at an affordable rate 1-2% and no
capitalization? Even finance companies don’t capitalize.
The reason IBR, ICR — and now PAYE — may be more effective is that
borrowers may get reduced payments now and then also be eligible for
loan forgiveness in the future. In other words, there is a light at the
end of the tunnel.
In the past, Asher notes, it was more difficult to apply for IBR and
so borrowers would take the easiest route (usually deferment), which was
also the one usually recommended when they reached out to their lender
for help. But hopefully that’s changing.
Borrowers now have access to an online portal where they can find out
which student loan repayment programs they are eligible for. Once you
sign in, explains Asher, you can “any of the income driven repayment
options. You don’t even have to know which one you qualify for. You can
even draw the IRS data (from your tax returns) into the form.”
All of these programs are largely off-limits to parents who took out
Parent PLUS loans, with one exception: when Parent PLUS loans are
consolidated with a Federal Direct Consolidation Loan, they become
eligible for ICR. The formula for determining ICR eligibility is
complicated, Cohen warns: “There’s a square root in it.” But for some,
it can be a tremendous benefit. “It’s possible the term can be shorter
than 25 years,” he notes.
Still Out of Reach?
Still, even the low payments offered under IBR can be out of reach
for some borrowers. Our reader, Liz, for example, is struggling with
cancer and about $97,000 in student loan debt. She wrote, “As someone
with an older loan that requires 15% of one’s income, not the 10%, at a
lower income level this is also too onerous.”
Usually, though, borrowers can use IBR to pay student loans if they
very carefully manage their spending. “A lot of times they think they
can’t afford (the payment under IBR), but it’s often the budget,”
observes Cohen.
And what other choice to do borrowers have? Until it is easier for
borrowers who are deeply in debt to discharge student loans in
bankruptcy, this is often the only hope they have of ever seeing a zero
balance.
Need Help on Your Student Loans?
If you’re struggling to pay student loans, research these programs
immediately. Try the tools offered at the government’s student loan
website, and talk to the company servicing your loan. But if your lender
pushes forbearance, don’t assume that’s the only — or best — option.
“No one can predict the future but forbearance can be very costly,”
Asher says. “It’s far too costly to use for a long-term strategy.”
If you are still having trouble understanding or evaluating your
options, you may want to talk with a consumer law attorney with
expertise in these programs. These attorneys often charge affordable
fees, knowing their clients are in a financial bind. In addition to
helping clients in his home state of Connecticut, Cohen trains consumer
lawyers across the country and maintains a directory of them on his
website.
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