USA TODAY US Edition

Student debt puts weddings on back burner

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One-third of young Americans wait until loans paid off.

Student debt is putting a damper on young Americans’ relationsh­ip decisions, according to a new study from private lender LendKey Technologi­es.

About one-third of respondent­s between ages 18 and 34 say they might postpone marriage – or have already done so – until student debt is paid off, according to the study, which surveyed 1,037 U.S. adults who attended college. The study was given to USA TODAY exclusivel­y.

That number shrank among older respondent­s. About 17% of those between 35 and 54 would postpone marriage and 10% of those 55 and older would delay it.

Debt also affected partner choices. Just over one-third of millennial and Gen Z respondent­s say a potential partner’s student or credit card balances could affect their choice of a spouse, depending on the amount of debt. Twenty percent say they’d be fine with student loan debt but not credit debt, while 6% say the reverse.

Just 4% say any amount of debt was a dealbreake­r. Roughly 36% of the people surveyed say debt wouldn’t factor into marital decisions.

“Student debt is something millennial­s have to think about when considerin­g marriage,” says Vince Passione, chief executive at LendKey. “It’s not just affecting their wallets, it’s also affecting the way they view relationsh­ips.”

A separate study shows that more than 50% of dating millennial­s don’t

Jessica Menton About one-third of respondent­s between ages 18 and 34 say they might postpone marriage – or have already done so – until student debt is paid off.

want to marry until their finances are in order, according to the recent survey from Credit Karma. Almost two-thirds of those surveyed millennial­s who were in a relationsh­ip have a separate bank account from their significan­t other. And nearly one-third say that keeping at least one bank account separate from their partner’s helps keep their relationsh­ip alive.

Borrowers of all ages currently owe roughly $1.5 trillion in student loans, according to the Brookings Institutio­n. About 42 million Americans have student loans, which are the second-largest portion of household debt after mortgages.

LendKey’s survey also found a lack of financial literacy around student loans. Just 16% of respondent­s between 18-34 say they have “shopped around” for the best rate and terms for a student loan. By contrast, two-thirds overall shopped for the best rates and terms for cars, 60% for insurance and 57% for vacations.

The data suggest that students need a greater understand­ing of the loan process, says Passione of LendKey.

About 41% say they believed loans came from the schools themselves, while 14% incorrectl­y guessed angel investors are providing loans to the public. Millennial and Gen Z borrowers were more likely than older generation­s to believe that a government program eventually will relieve their burden.

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