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StudentLoan
Consolidation - SchoolLoan
If you have student loans other than
Direct Loans, you may want to apply for a Direct Consolidation Loan.
Consolidation means making only one monthly payment to cover all your
loans.
There may be several advantages for
you if you
consolidate your student loan. Because the interest rate will
be the same as for Direct Loans, you may be able to pay less interest
than you're paying on your current loans.
You may be able to reduce your
monthly payments. You can also choose the student loan repayment
plan that best suits your financial circumstances.
To consolidate under Direct Loans, you must have at least one Direct
Loan or FFEL Program loan.
Direct and Federal Consolidation
Student Loans you can consolidate your loans at any time-while
you're still in school, during your six-month grace period, or after
you begin repayment. |
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If you
consolidate your student loan
while you're in school, you'll receive a grace period on your
consolidation loan.
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Note that you can consolidate only
Direct Loans and FFELs while you're in school; the other types of
loans listed in this section may be consolidated only after you leave
school.
School loans
that may be consolidated:
- Direct Stafford/Ford Loans
(subsidized and unsubsidized)
- FFEL Stafford Loans (subsidized
and unsubsidized)
- Direct and Federal PLUS Loans
- Guaranteed Student Loans (GSL)
- Federal Insured Student Loans [FISL]
- Federal Supplemental Loans for
Students (SLS)
- Auxiliary Loans to Assist Students
(ALAS)
- Federal Perkins Loans
- National Direct/Defense Student
Loans (NDSL)
- Health Professions Student Loans (HPSL)
- Health Education Assistance Loans
(HEAL)
- Loans for Disadvantaged Students
(LDS)
If you want to consolidate your
student loan while you're in school and you're attending a Direct
Loan school, you must have at least one fully disbursed Direct Loan or
FFEL in an "in-school" period. If you're attending a non-Direct Loan
school, you must have a Direct Loan, and you must have either a Direct
Loan or FFEL in an "in-school" period. An "in-school" period is the
period before a loan enters the grace period and while the borrower is
enrolled at least half time at an eligible school.
Note: If you want to consolidate during your grace period, wait to
apply until two months before the grace period ends. Repayment on
consolidation loans begins within 60 days of the first loan
disbursement, which means your grace period will be cut short if you
apply too early.
If you have only FFEL Program loans, once you leave school you
can consolidate them under Direct Loans only if you can't get an FFEL
consolidation loan, or you can't get one with income-sensitive
repayment terms acceptable to you.
Similar conditions apply to parents. They must have an outstanding
balance on a Direct PLUS Loan or a Federal PLUS Loan (under the FFEL
Program). Parents must not have an adverse credit history or, if so,
must either document extenuating circumstances or obtain an endorser
for the loan who has no adverse credit history. You may not be an
endorser for your parent.
Even defaulted loans may be consolidated if you agree either to repay
your Direct Consolidation Loan under the Income Contingent Repayment
Plan or make satisfactory repayment arrangements (for consolidation
purposes, defined as three consecutive, voluntary, on time, full
monthly payments).
Note: A married couple may consolidate their loans jointly if at least
one spouse meets the requirements for loan consolidation. Both will be
responsible for repayment of the loan, even if one spouse dies or they
separate or divorce.
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Source: FCIC
StudentLoan | Refinance |
Student Loan Consolidation | Student Loans | SchoolLoan
Refinancing Your Student Loan | School Loan
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