
Student Loans -- Taking Charge
From the Nolo.com Debt & Bankruptcy Center
Paying back your student loans may be a chore,
but it's worth it.
If you owe the government or a private lender money you used to pay for
your education, you're not alone. Nearly one half of all undergraduates
finance all or a part of their educations with student loans. The percentage
is even greater for students who get advanced degrees: over 50% of all
graduate students and 75% of professional students borrow money to attend
school.
If your student loan debt is high, you may be overwhelmed with the thought
of how you will ever repay it. Even if you owe a relatively small amount,
you may be struggling. After all, it's harder for someone who earns $1,000
a month to lay out $100 than it is for someone who makes $5,000 a month
to repay $500.
Millions of people leave the hallowed halls of colleges and universities
with a diploma -- and severe anxieties about how to pay off the loans
that helped them get it. And if you withdrew from school before graduating,
your woes may be worse: you owe money to repay the cost of a credential
you never received.
Getting Started
When taking charge of your loans, be prepared to face a world that is complex
and often frustrating. To get your bearings, you may need to sort through
many different types of loans with names and terms that have changed over
the years. You may not even know where your loans are being held -- by your
original lender, the Department of Education or some other institution.
Even the language may seem strange and intimidating -- grace periods, deferments,
forbearances, defaults -- and those are just a few of the terms you'll encounter.
You may face a mountain of unsorted, confusing papers. And you are likely
to have some exasperating conversations with government or loan company
representatives.
Fighting Back
If you've neither made payments in a while nor arranged to postpone your
payments, you may be facing some serious collection efforts. The Department
of Education, working with the IRS, collects hundreds of thousands of dollars
a year by intercepting the tax refunds of student loan defaulters. Thousands
of others have their wages garnished by the government. And if you have
no wages that can be grabbed, you might wind up in court defending yourself
against charges that you've reneged on your student loan debt.
Even if collections haven't reached any of these stages, you may have
received nasty and threatening letters or phone calls. Perhaps no one
is bothering you, but you're trying to buy a house and the student loans
you neglected to pay have damaged your credit and now keep you from getting
a loan. Or you may be a recent graduate worried about meeting the monthly
loan payments you're supposed to make.
People of all ages and income brackets have student loan problems. Nearly
a million people are currently not paying, or defaulting, on their loans.
And that is a trend that has grown over the years. Throughout the 1970s
and 1980s, the percentage of people who defaulted on their student loans
grew each year at an alarming rate, peaking at 22.4% in 1990.
The default statistics horrified U.S. government officials. In response,
Congress enacted several laws to control defaults. Much of the legislation
limits the amount of loan money available to students who attend vocational
or trade schools, where the default rate was high as 68% at individual
schools and averaged 35% -- several times more than the rate at two-year
and four-year schools. But laws that provide for rigorous collection action
and the opportunity to get out of default apply to all former students
who are behind on their student loans, not just those who attended trade
schools.
The laws appear to be working -- at least from the government's point
of view. The most recent statistics put the default rate below 9%. In
actual dollars, however, the total amount outstanding is $26 billion.
And these amounts don't include the money owed by the millions of people
who can't repay their loans but who aren't yet in default.
These default statistics may depress you. But don't give up. There is
much you can do to take control of your own loan situation if you have
the right information, a little perseverance and a large amount of patience.
Once you've organized your paperwork, made a budget, learned about your
repayment options and contacted your loan holders, chances are good that
you can create a strategy for dealing with your student loans that really
works.
Ignoring your loans will not make them go away. Eventually, you will
have to deal with them. Further delay just increases the amount you owe,
as interest and fees and costs for collection mount up.
Click
here for related information and products from Nolo.com.
|