The Student Loan
By
John Williams
The
rising costs of college tuition have made it almost a necessity to
apply for a student loan today. Students not only have tuition costs,
but the cost of books, meals, gas, cell phones, recreation, etc. The
variety of student loans enables students to take care of their varying
college expenses. A student loan however, is a loan that must be repaid
under specified circumstances.
Each of the following are student loans with differing conditions and time frames for repayment:
• A Direct Student Loan is a loan with a schedule of repayment six
to nine months after the student has completed school. The Direct
Student Loan is distributed through the school the student is
attending, which enables the interest rates to be much lower than a
Guaranteed Student Loan.
• Guaranteed Student Loans, also known as Stafford Loans have a low
interest rate. A student can apply for a subsidized or unsubsidized
student loan. A subsidized loan means the government pays the interest
for you while you are in school. The subsidized student loan is based
on the students financial need. An unsubsidized student loan means you
will be charged interest while you are attending school. The principal
must start being paid after you have finished school. Both types of
student loans need to start repayment six months after the student has
finished college.
• Federal Parent Loans or PLUS loans as they are known is a student
loan not contingent on your income, but lenders do consider personal
credit history. Parents or guardians who have a dependent child
enrolled in college at least part-time are eligible for the PLUS loan.
The interest rate is 9% or less.
Virtually any school or program will allow you to utilize the
Direct Student loan, Guaranteed Student loan or PLUS loan. It is very
important to thoroughly research all available options for funding
long-term education. Your future is tied to your funding, which is your
student loan.
About the author:
John Williams is the student loan blogger at http://studentloan.blogspot.comHe reviews student loans and interprets often complicated financial data into simple to understand language.
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