270 likes | 361 Views
DIRECT LOAN CONSOLIDATION. David A. Solá U.S. Department of Education Boston Regional Office. 2002 MASFAA Conference. What we’ll cover. Benefits of consolidation Repayment options Interest rate calculation Who is eligible Counseling students Application process.
E N D
DIRECT LOAN CONSOLIDATION David A. Solá U.S. Department of Education Boston Regional Office 2002 MASFAA Conference
What we’ll cover • Benefits of consolidation • Repayment options • Interest rate calculation • Who is eligible • Counseling students • Application process
What is consolidation? • Multiple federal loans are combined into one new consolidation loan • A simple way to manage debt • One lender • One payment
What are the benefits? • One lender and one payment • The Department of Education is the lender, and always will be • One contact • The Direct Loan Servicing Center
What are the benefits? (Cont’d) • Flexible repayment options • Four plans to choose from • Standard • Extended • Graduated • Income Contingent Repayment (ICR) • Can switch plans at any time
What are the benefits? (Cont’d) • Standard Repayment Plan • Fixed monthly payments ($50 min.) for up to 10 years • Extended Repayment Plan • Fixed monthly payments ($50 min.) for 12-30 years, depending on total debt
What are the benefits? (Cont’d) • Repayment Period for Extended Plan: Amount of DebtLength of Repayment Period Less than $10K 12 years $10-19,999 15 years $20-39,999 20 years $40-59,999 25 years $60K or more 30 years
What are the benefits? (Cont’d) • Graduated Repayment Plan • Payments start low, increase every two years for 12-30 years • Monthly payment will never increase more than 1.5 times what borrower would pay under the Standard Plan
What are the benefits? (Cont’d) • Income contingent repayment plan • Monthly payment based on annual AGI, family size, and total loan amount • Up to 25 years • Low income borrowers pay the lesser of the amount they would pay if they repaid in 12 years, or 20% of their discretionary income
What are the benefits? (Cont’d) • Reduced monthly payments • Interactive calculators on web site www.loanconsolidation.ed.gov • Varied deferment options
What are the benefits? (Cont’d) • .25 percent interest rate discount for EDA • No fee to consolidate • Can prepay at any time without penalty
Interest rate • Weighted average of the interest rates of loans being consolidated • Rounded up one-eighth of one percent • Will not exceed 8.25% • Fixed for life of loan
Interest rate (Cont’d) • Direct Loan interest rates from July 1, 2002 to June 30, 2003: • If the loan was first disbursed between 7/1/98 and 6/30/03 and borrower is in school, grace, or deferment, the rate is 3.46% • If the loan was first disbursed between 7/1/98 and 6/30/03 and borrower is in repayment or forbearance, the rate is 4.06%
Who is eligible? • Out of School borrowers are eligible to consolidate if they: • Have at least one Direct Loan OR • Have at least one FFEL AND Have been unable to obtain a FFEL Consolidation Loan or unable to obtain one with acceptable income-sensitive repayment terms
Who is eligible? (Cont’d) • In School borrowers are eligible to consolidate if they: • Are attending a Direct Loan school and • Include one DL or FFEL in an in-school period OR • Are attending a FFEL school and • Have at least one DL and • Include one DL or FFEL in an in-school period
Who is eligible? (Cont’d) • If the borrower is in their grace period– • Secures lower interest rate • Repayment begins 60 days after first disbursement of Consolidation loan
Who is eligible? (Cont’d) • If the borrower is in default on any federal loans, they are eligible to consolidate if they: • Agree to repay under the ICR plan OR • Have made satisfactory repayment arrangements on the defaulted loan
Who is eligible? (Cont’d) • What about joint consolidation with a spouse? • DON’T.
What loans can be consolidated? • Most federal education loans • Ineligible loans include: • Loans made by a state or private lender, not guaranteed by the federal government • Law Access Loans • Primary Care Loans • Medical Assist Loans • PLATO Loans • TERI Loans
Is Direct Loan Consolidation the way to go? • Borrowers should consider these factors: • Interest rates of their loans • Current monthly payments • Are they manageable? • How many are left? • Lifetime cost of the consolidation • Multiple lenders
The Application Online • www.loanconsolidation.ed.gov • Sign prom note electronically with a PIN! • pin.ed.gov • Save unfinished application online • Check processing status • 60-90 days to complete process
The Application Express Phone Application • If the borrower has only Direct Loans to consolidate • 1-888-758-9730
The Application Paper Application • Download from the web OR • Request a paper application • Phone 1-800-557-7392 • E-mail at loan_consolidation@mail.eds.com
And payments begin! • Repayment begins 60 days after first disbursement • Borrowers who consolidate while in-school have a 6-month grace period • 180 days to add loans • Direct Loan Servicing website offers on-line bill presentment and on-line payment • www.dlservicer.ed.gov
Contacts for Borrowers • Applicant Services/Loan Origination 1-800-557-7392 www.loanconsolidation.ed.gov • Direct Loan Servicing Center 1-800-848-0979 www.dlservicer.ed.gov
Contacts for Schools • Federal Student Aid Office – Boston • 617 565-6911 • http://www.loanconsolidation.ed.gov/school/ • “Forms and Publications” for Brochures, Applications, and Guide for Schools • www.dlservicer.ed.gov/schools • View student accounts, delinquency reports
Q & A Please, Oh! Please don’t ask me any hard questions?