San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Should couples hitch their student loans to those of spouses?

- By Ryan Lane Ryan Lane is NerdWallet writer.

Multiple studies have shown that student debt can cause borrowers to delay getting married. For some borrowers, though, marriage could actually be a gateway to paying less.

You can save money by refinancin­g student loans, but not everyone qualifies. If your better half has a better financial profile, you can share the benefits of refinancin­g in two ways: Refinance together. You combine your student loans with your partner’s into one spousal loan with a lower interest rate. Cosign for you. Your spouse cosigns a loan refinancin­g your debt, getting you a lower rate on the back of his or her finances.

If you’re considerin­g getting hitched to your partner’s loans, here’s how to decide if you should.

For better: Refinancin­g makes the most sense to save money on higherinte­rest private and graduate school loans.

For example, by refinancin­g a $60,000 loan from 7% interest to 5%, you’d save roughly $7,200 over a 10year term.

Typically, you’ll need robust finances and a good credit score to qualify and get the best rate.

Spouses may “increase (their) chances at getting a better rate together,” says Andrew Zoeller, digital program director for Purefy, which refinances loans for Pentagon

Federal Credit Union, or PenFed.

For joint spousal loans and loans that spouses cosign, PenFed evaluates the couple based on their combined income and counts shared debts, like mortgages, only once. This allows more individual­s — such as stayathome parents with good credit — to meet PenFed’s lending criteria.

Other lenders may evaluate spouses separately. Ask a lender about its policy before applying.

In 2019, 67% of cosigned PenFed student loan refinances were spousal loans, according to Zoeller.

“It’s something our program is known for,” he says.

For worse: If you cosign a refinancin­g loan or combine debts with your spouse, you’re equally responsibl­e for repaying the balance — even after a divorce.

“There is no exit ramp,” says Joshua R.I. Cohen, a lawyer in West Dover, Vt., who operates TheStudent­LoanLawyer.com.

For example, Cohen says a divorce decree could outline who’s responsibl­e for repayment, but both names remain legally on the debt. That means if one spouse doesn’t pay, the other still suffers the consequenc­es of missed payments, like damaged credit and collection calls.

Divorcees could refinance the loan or portions of it into their individual names to get around this, but only by meeting a lender’s income and credit qualificat­ions on their own.

Final decision: Still have cold feet about refinancin­g with your spouse? These steps may help protect you: Try cosigning first. Cosigning may have a valuable option that spousal loans lack: programs that eventually remove your spouse from the loan. Cosigner release policies vary by lender; PenFed, for example, doesn’t release spouse cosigners. Get extra life insurance. Cover yourself if your partner dies and you have to pay a hefty spousal loan on your own. You may owe the balance on a cosigned loan as well, depending on a lender’s policies. Know what you’re giving up. Once you refinance loans, you can’t get your original loans back. If you want or need federal loan benefits, like alternate repayment plans and forgivenes­s programs, don’t refinance them.

Cohen also says to make sure the savings are worth it.

“I would rather pay 2% more in interest and know I’m not tied to this idiot for the rest of my life,” he says.

Don’t get stuck: Kathy Snell, 55, of Eugene, Ore., would love to undo her spousal loan. But it has nothing to do with her marriage.

“We’ve managed even through all the financial stuff to stay happily married,” Snell says.

That “stuff ” includes a joint student loan that’s grown to almost $420,000.

Snell and her husband combined their loans via a federal program that ended in 2006. Their loan isn’t eligible for

Public Service Loan Forgivenes­s, which forgives the federal loans of borrowers working for qualifying employers — like the University of Oregon, where Snell is an attending veterinari­an.

Other federal borrowers can consolidat­e existing loans to eventually qualify for this program. But federal spousal loans can’t be reconsolid­ated. Legislatio­n to let spouses unbundle these loans is part of the College Affordabil­ity Act, which is under considerat­ion by Congress.

While Snell’s circumstan­ces don’t apply to private loans, she still cautions couples about the flexibilit­y they lose by combining loans.

“Knowing now what I know, I would recommend against it,” Snell says. “Keep those student loans in your individual pot.”

 ?? Mark Lennihan / Associated Press 2019 ?? Refinancin­g can pay off your student loans, replacing them with a new loan with new terms.
Mark Lennihan / Associated Press 2019 Refinancin­g can pay off your student loans, replacing them with a new loan with new terms.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States