Antelope Valley Press

Take advantage of student loan breaks before 2020 ends

- By RYAN LANE

Talk of student loan forgivenes­s has borrowers looking forward to 2021. But many already benefited from some unpreceden­ted events in 2020:

• An administra­tive forbearanc­e has paused most federal loan payments interest-free since March.

• The forbearanc­e has also halted collection­s on defaulted loans.

• Interest rates fell to historic lows.

It’s unclear how long these breaks will last. If you’re in good financial shape, here’s how to take advantage of them while you can.

Make a lump-sum payment

The current student loan forbearanc­e is scheduled to end Jan. 31. All borrowers should have a plan for repayment by that point.

If you’ll be able to afford your pre-pandemic payment amount, consider putting extra money toward your loans now.

Student loan payments must first cover outstandin­g interest. But with those charges paused since March, a lump-sum payment would put a direct dent in what you owe.

“By and large, the majority of students will not have any sort of interest accrual,” says Stacey MacPhetres, senior director of education finance at Bright Horizons, which provides workplace employee services, including education advice.

One exception could be recent college graduates whose loans have yet to enter repayment. Those could have multiple years of accrued interest.

For example, say you took out $5,500 in unsubsidiz­ed loans at 4% interest freshman year. Four years later, those loans could have accrued close to $900 in interest to be added to your principal balance when your grace period ends. If you pay that interest off before then, you’ll stop future interest from growing on a bigger balance and pay less overall.

MacPhetres says the “fervor” around forgivenes­s has some borrowers balking at extra payments. But there are no guarantees that debt will be canceled.

Get out of default

Federal student loan default has consequenc­es like wage garnishmen­t and loss of tax refunds and Social Security payments. These actions are also scheduled to restart in February.

To avoid collection activities, address defaulted loans as soon as possible. You have two primary options to do this: consolidat­ion and rehabilita­tion.

Federal student loan consolidat­ion can pay off your defaulted loan and replace it with a new one. This can quickly fix a default if you choose an income-driven plan for your new loan.

“If the borrower thinks they might be subject to a Social Security offset or a tax offset, speed might be important,” says Persis Yu, director of the nonprofit National Consumer Law Center’s Student Loan Borrower Assistance Project.

Rehabilita­tion takes at least nine months of on-time payments and returns your defaulted loan to good standing. This removes the default from your credit report, but not the late payments leading up to it.

Months spent in the current administra­tive forbearanc­e count toward rehabilita­tion. If that break is extended through September, as some lawmakers have proposed, that could cover the entire rehab process if you enroll by the end of 2020.

Refinance private loans

Refinancin­g replaces your student loans with a new loan from a private lender. Don’t refinance federal loans until it’s clear whether the administra­tive forbearanc­e will be extended.

But private student loans don’t qualify for that benefit, and refinancin­g them could save you money.

“With interest rates so low, most private student loan borrowers are able to lower that interest rate pretty significan­tly,” says Jared Andreoli, a certified financial planner and president of Simplicity Financial in Milwaukee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States