Federal student loan consolidation gives you the security of a fixed interest rate. By consolidating your federal parent student loans, you’ll replace your variable-rate college loans with a fixed-rate consolidation loan, so you’ll never have to worry about interest rates rising and leaving you guessing about your monthly payment amount.
Take the Hassle Out of Repaying Your Student Loans
If you have multiple college loans in repayment and you’re juggling multiple bills, multiple due dates, and multiple monthly payments to multiple lenders, a student loan consolidation could help make your repayment easier to manage. With a student loan consolidation program, you can bundle all your eligible federal parent or student loans into one single consolidation loan with just one monthly bill and one monthly payment that’s fixed for the life of your college loan.
Cut Monthly Payments on Your Student Loans by up to 40%
Besides offering you convenience and the security of a fixed interest rate, a student loan consolidation could also help you cut your monthly student loan payments almost in half. When you consolidate your college loans, you may be able to extend the repayment term on your parent or student loans by up to 20 years. With that longer repayment term, since you have more time to repay, the amount you have to pay each month will typically go down. By consolidating your college loans, your monthly payments could go down by up to 40%!
Apply in Minutes to Consolidate Your Student Loans
You can apply for your student loan consolidation in minutes, either online or with a quick phone call. It’s fast, easy, and free to apply, and there are NO fees, NO credit checks, and NO co-signers required.
There are also no prepayment penalties on your Federal Consolidation Loan. When you consolidate your student loans you’ll never be charged extra for paying more than the minimum each month or for paying off your student loan consolidation early.
Who’s Eligible for Student Loan Consolidation?
To be eligible to consolidate your own federal student loans, you can’t currently be enrolled in school more than half time. The student loans you’re looking to consolidate must be in repayment, in a grace period, or in an authorized deferment or forbearance period.
Your parents can consolidate the PLUS loans they took out to help you pay for school as soon as those student loans have been fully disbursed and have entered repayment, even if you’re still in school full time. Although your parents can consolidate their PLUS loans, you won’t be able to consolidate your own college loans with your parents’ loans.
Student Loan Consolidation for Private Student Loans
If you have private student loans in addition to (or instead of) your federal student loans, you won’t be able to consolidate your private student loans under the federal student loan consolidation program. But you may be eligible to consolidate your private student loans separately with a Private Consolidation Loan, which offers the same convenience of a single consolidated loan for your private student loans.
Author:Jeff Mictabor
From: http://www.nextstudent
This entry was posted
on Thursday, December 20th, 2007 at 10:09 pm and is filed under Consolidation.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
|