Winning Strategies for Tackling Student Loan Debt

September 1st, 2010 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in Loans
student loan
by Christopher S. Penn

Winning Strategies for Tackling Student Loan Debt

If you’ve recently finished school and are currently in your six-month grace period before you have to make your first student loan payment, you may have questions about the best way to tackle your debt. Yes, you can simply make monthly payments on your various loans, but with a little planning, you can save thousands of dollars, minimize your monthly payments, and improve your credit score in the process.

Currently the average undergraduate finishes school with over ,000 in student loans. For many students, this hefty amount owed is piled onto existing debt such as car payments and credit card bills. So, if you feel overwhelmed with what you owe, you are not alone. Rest assured, however, you can tackle your debt successfully and effectively by taking a proactive approach.

First, remember that your student loan debt is probably at an interest rate much lower than your credit card debt. The highest interest rate on student loans compares favorably with the exorbitant rates issued by credit card companies. With rates as high as 30 percent, concentrating on paying down credit card debt should be a primary focus.

If you have no other liabilities other than student loans, congratulations! But, you’ll still need to be strategic about how you will pay back what you owe. Most standard student loans have a ten-year payback period and a monthly payment schedule, but there are many more cost-effective options that are worth exploring.

Before you make that first payment, call your lenders and verify what the monthly amounts will be. If you simply cannot afford to make the payments, ask about alternative payment options. Most lenders offer graduated payment plans where monthly payments start about 50 percent below the standard amount and gradually increase over time. As well, you can frequently extend your repayment period up to 30 years. However, you will need to be careful about paying so little per month that you are only paying interest and no principal.

Another very effective way to decrease what you are paying each month is to is to consolidate your loans by doing a student loan consolidation. This is a great option for borrowers who have several loans at different interest rates. By consolidating these loans, you can lock in a fixed interest rate, lower your payments, and extend your repayment period. Also, consolidation can be quite beneficial for improving your credit because existing loans will be paid off before a new loan is issued. You can ask your current lenders if they offer consolidation plans. If not, there are many lenders who can help you with your loans, and you are able to consolidate during your grace period. Make sure to ask about interest rate discounts that are usually offered for signing up for auto-pay and for having extended on-time payments. Most borrowers who consolidate their loans will save a substantial amount on their monthly payments, up to 60 percent each billing cycle. However, remember that the interest rate on consolidated student loans changes every year on July 1st. Thus, if you are considering consolidation, make sure to submit your application well before this date. Interest rates will be going up more than 2 percent this year, so don’t delay.

If you are approaching the end of your grace period, and you are currently unemployed, disabled, or planning to return to school, you can defer payment on your loans for up to three years. The government will pay the interest on your subsidized loans during this time.

Like deferment, forbearance is another option to delay repayment for as long as three years. You can apply for forbearance by proving financial hardship to your lender. However unlike deferment, you will be responsible for accrued interest during the forbearance period.

No matter how you go about repaying student loan debt, by all means, do not default on these loans. There are serious consequences for not paying back what you have borrowed. Defaulted loans will appear negatively on your credit report, and this may prevent you from qualifying for other types of credit such as mortgages and car loans. As well, defaulted loans will be turned over to a collection agency, and you could possibly be sued. You may even have your wages garnished or your income tax refunds intercepted. And, of course, you will not be able to apply for additional student loans until you either repay the loans in full or make payment arrangements with the lender.

Yes, paying your loan payments is the best way to prevent defaulting on your student loans. Also, make sure to notify your lender with any changes that affect your loans such as name changes or new addresses and phone numbers. If you do experience financial difficulty, don’t delay in asking for forbearance, deferment, or an alternative payment plan. Once you have defaulted, you won’t be able to qualify for these options. And, don’t forget to keep careful records of your loans. Save promissory notes, cancelled checks, and letters that you send to your lender.

Tackling your student loans is possible, and with a little financial know-how and advanced planning, you can customize a payment plan that will work with your financial status. So, go ahead and get started! The sooner you take control of your debt, the sooner you will pay it off.

Mike O’Brien offers advice and information about student loan consolidation. This is a quality web site with a choice of student loan consolidation advice and information at your fingertips!

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How important is it to pay off debt before applying for a home loan?

August 31st, 2010 by Bank Loan | 4 Comments | Filed in Loans

Question by Kerrie H: How important is it to pay off debt before applying for a home loan?
I want to apply for a home loan but I have about $ 10,000 in credit card debt. I want to get in on the market now, how important is it that I pay off my debt before applying for the loan?

Best answer:

Answer by Aim
It depends on your income. The biggest factor taken into consideration is your debt-to-income ratio. You will be financed based on this; no one is going to give you a loan that is more than you can afford. The ratio determines what you can afford and you can be financed accordingly.

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Economic Crisis – a People in Denial

August 31st, 2010 by Bank Loan | No Comments | Filed in News
global financial crisis
by mars_discovery_district

Economic Crisis – a People in Denial

By Ursula Tillmann                                                                        

Based once again on the principal of hope and promise, North-Americans are sleep-walking into the future while consumption still lingers to be the past-time sport in popularity just after ice-hockey. We are a nation in denial. Organizations, such as the tourism industry still paint pink pictures of the future, as individual hotel owners are digging into financial reserves and are throwing good money after bad money.
The North American way, that tomorrow will take care of itself – deeply routed in their religious puritan way of thinking, which stemmed from their founding political leaders, is still well and alive amidst the financial crisis. Televison advertising still promises whole sets of living room furniture for zero down payment and no interest for the next five years. The car industry, bailed out with billions of dollars still has its sticky fingers in the lending market: No money down and small interest on car leases for the next few years. Shopping as usual is the tenor to keep the wheels of a doomed economy spinning until it has run out of fuel in the truest sense.
The credit card institutions, which will ask for a bail out next – equivalent to the amount American banks needed to keep going – are still luring people into more debt. Soliciting phone calls outnumber any connection you have with your family. Get another credit card. Why not! As the average debt per consumer just on credit cards used to be around 000, that number is quickly rising. Mortgage payments for houses threatened by foreclosures and cars running on loans that would not even allow a refill at the gas pump are charged on credit cards. In a recent US talk show they established that the average credit card debt per American was close to 000, with some persons having up to 24 different credit cards. Shop till they pull the plastic – no moral obligations. Today is the day, live in the now. The American way of thinking and therefore doing has seduced several generations into a people, which were always told: There is plenty more to come. The old “Frontier” thinking prevails. And none of their leaders has really given a wake-up call yet.
All eyes are on Obama, the 44th president of the United States. A good man. But the principal of hope won’t help this time around here in North America or anywhere else in our globalized world. Too deep is the swamp we are in. Our world-wide debt is presently three times higher than our income around the globe. Anybody running a private household should be able to figure out, what this means for the food on the table in the future.
But are we learning anything right now in the process of such obvious despair rising on the horizon of the world economy? Not yet in North America. Gourmet restaurants still enjoy customers who can’t afford even the tip for the waitress on their credit card, shopping centers are crowded with customers who think with the money they don’t really have they can get bargains right now. The illusion still holds its perfection. The twilight of the gods,  Götterdämmerung, is only an opera by Richard Wagner. The story can’t be real.
Some statistics have it, that every North American spends .10 of every earned dollar. Hello! Time to wake up, or?
So how does this psychologically impact the “new world”? Broadly speaking, it doesn’t. It goes right over their “in the moment” attitude – trained, manipulated and refined by a society that pretended to be better and more clever than the old world . Maybe a few, who have already lost their jobs in the oil- and service industry are starting to feel overwhelmed or depressed. But that plastic issued by Visa, Amex or MasterCard still feels pretty secure in the wallet. And after all, the first order of patriotism is consumption, which makes up nearly 70 percent of the buck going around the economic carousel in North America.
It’s all an illusion – but the denial of reality keeps a people still quiet. One could say: “Do not disturb”, because the awakening could be disastrous. And civil unrest won’t be a far fetched reality in a neighboring country, where every household has some handguns handy.

Freelance Journalist. Born and raised in Germany. Studied Journalism in Canada. Lives in Canmore, Alberta, Canada.

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Will taking out a car loan hurt my chances of buying a house?

August 31st, 2010 by Bank Loan | 6 Comments | Filed in Loans

Question by saylasmommy: Will taking out a car loan hurt my chances of buying a house?
My Husband and I are stil unsure of renting or buying right now…Its kind of complicated since he just got out of the military and we just moved back to MA across the country and are currently staying with my family. We always used one car because e lived on a small military base…now we NEED to cars because Im starting a part-time job and I have to small children…My husband also works a hour away 48 hours at a time! So a car is a MUST! I have money in my savings but im saving that for the house (we are using the VA Loan) Will it hurt us to take out a small auto loan for like $ 4,000? My husbands credit score is about 710…We also have no credit card debt at all….We have three cards but only charge gas and pay them off right away…And we have one car loan out thats a couple years old for $ 12,000. thanks!

Best answer:

Answer by mazziatplay
With your limited other debt, you should be just fine.

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Should I use my IRA to pay off my credit card and auto loan?

August 31st, 2010 by Bank Loan | 7 Comments | Filed in Loans

Question by John: Should I use my IRA to pay off my credit card and auto loan?
I am 26 yrs old and have 6500 in credit card debt and $ 5000 remaining on an auto loan. I was thinking of using most of my IRA to pay off these loans. Being that I’m still in my mid- twenties and having 30+ years to save up for retirement, it seems like a good idea. Plus I’ll be able to aggressively save after I pay off these loans, both retirement and cash reserves. Good or bad idea?

Best answer:

Answer by Judy
Yo do realize that when taking out the money out of your IRA you will pay taxes at your tax rate and a 10% penalty.
So expect to pay almost 40% of that money in fees.
You’ll have very little left after you pay uncle sam at tax time.
/

What do you think? Answer below!

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Q&A: Can get a home loan while working with a debt reduction place?

August 31st, 2010 by Bank Loan | 2 Comments | Filed in Loans
homes loan
by alexabboud

Question by Luke M: Can get a home loan while working with a debt reduction place?
I need 2 get my credit card debt under control bad but need a home loan? What should i do?

Best answer:

Answer by BOBINGTON
Pay off your debt. They don’t just look at your credit when deciding whether you qualify for a loan. Its actually several factors, your debt to income ratio is also a very important factor.

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Which bank offers the best personal loans (I live in north Jersey/new york area)?

August 31st, 2010 by Bank Loan | 3 Comments | Filed in Bank

Question by L.E.B.: Which bank offers the best personal loans (I live in north Jersey/new york area)?
I need a loan to pay off small credit card debt and build a business website. All I need is about 10,000 dollars. I would like to know

which banks offer best personal loans?

(best to me = lowest interest rate, more understanding, like a bank who is willing to wait for a few months before I start making payments, even though I doubt it). Anyway, which banks offer best personal loans? Thank you

Best answer:

Answer by runner1
Stay away from the big commercial banks. If you can join a credit union, that would probably be your better option.

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Q&A: Where can a high income earner get solid financial advice?

August 31st, 2010 by Bank Loan | 8 Comments | Filed in News

Question by docjulius: Where can a high income earner get solid financial advice?
All – my wife and have a combined annual income of about $ 275k. I’m trying to get good financial planning information or advice, but it seems like everywhere I look, the system is built for lower income earners, or the super wealthy… we are in an in between category. We are not “high net worth” investors, so private money management firms and fee only financial planners aren’t an option.

We don’t have any credit card debt, our cars are paid for, we have a modest mortgage relative to our income, and a lot of excess cash flow. While I know that this is a good problem to have, I’m not confident that I know where I should be putting the extra cash.

Are there any books or resources geared towards upper-middle income people?

Best answer:

Answer by Lex
Go to a professional financial planner. You can find them in your yellow pages or likely get some reccomendations within your workplace.

What do you think? Answer below!

financial advice for high income earners

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Does bankruptcy clear my bank and school loans?

August 31st, 2010 by Bank Loan | 2 Comments | Filed in Bank
bank loans
by eric731

Question by alto_sinclair: Does bankruptcy clear my bank and school loans?
21 years old Living In Cali
ok I do work. Unfortunetly im involved in identity theft. Someone put me into 70K in school loans and 20K+ in credit card debt. was just looking at Bankruptcy as a option.

Best answer:

Answer by †Ask Me Anything†
You can NEVER include your school loans in a bankruptcy. You have to pay those back if it takes you til the day you croak.

Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!

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Home Loan and equity loan? How does it work when a house is already paid off?

August 31st, 2010 by Bank Loan | 6 Comments | Filed in Loans

Question by Beth: Home Loan and equity loan? How does it work when a house is already paid off?
My mom has a home that she bought in 1997. She bought it for 81K and now it is worth about 350K. (It was built in 1991 and we are in southern California.)

She paid off the house back in 2004-just after her husband died she collected the 100K from the life insurnace policy. She is making about $ 8.60 an hour-full time-and now she will be bringing home less since her employer is going to take out about $ 50 a month for health benefits. She only made around 17K last year.
She is about 4 or 5K in credit card debt. Since her husband passed in 2004, she has paid down the credit card debt a lot from 7 or 8K – (most of the money came from the left over amount after paying the house off) but she is still struggling to pay all of her bills.

If my parents had not had the life insurance + if my mom had to pay the mortagage ($ 800.00 month) we would be living on the street now. There is no way she could afford that on her income. Is it worth it getting a home loan for 5K or 6K?
My mom has the ’99 truck (it was dad’s) and it is running and that truck is paid off. Her car a ’99-not running is also paid off. I already asked her if she wanted to rent the room out-she would rather not with her 3 little doggies. They would bark too much.

I thought that interest payments would be lower than credit cards. She is paying 22% of one of her credit cards. that is crazy! I will show this to her tomorrow. Thank you all! If I could I would give you all best answer!

Best answer:

Answer by jamesPurple
She is paying too much interest fees on a regular credit card.

Options :

- getting a low-interest credit card and transfer the balance.
- Equity loans are good – make sure to calculate all fees.

Can she improve her income ? Rent a room to a student ?

Good luck !

Give your answer to this question below!

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