Tag Archives: student loans

Student Loans: They’re Baaaaaack!

The last few years have been a very weird time in the financial aid world.  At the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, the federal government put a pause on federal student loans.  All loans in the Federal Direct loan program stopped accruing interest.  And no payments were required on these loans for borrowers who were in repayment status.  At the time when this started, we all expected the pandemic to be short-lived and everything would go back to normal in short order.  But we all know that the pandemic (and the student loan pause) continued for quite a while.  Covid-19 has become an endemic and we’ve accepted that it is something we will just have to deal with going forward.  And the student loan pause extended many times.  But it has finally come to an end.

Starting September 1st, federal student loans began accruing interest again, for the first time since March 2020.  For borrowers who are in school (or in their six-month grace period following leaving school), this means that the loan servicer has started keeping track of the interest that is accruing each month, and when the loan goes into repayment that accrued interest will be added to the principal balance of the loan (this is called capitalization).  For borrowers who are already in repayment, this means that October is not only going to bring fall foliage, pumpkin spice latte, and spooky decorations.  October is going to bring a student loan payment.  For many this will be their first student loan payment ever.  For many more, this will be their first payment in several years.  This is going to take a little getting used to!

Thankfully, along with this new era of interest accrual and required payment, this fall also brings us a new income-driven repayment plan (IDR). IDRs base the amount of monthly payments on the amount the borrower is earning, instead of on the amount that was borrowed.  The Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan is replacing Revised Pay as You Earn (REPAYE), and it is without question the most favorable of the assorted income-driven payment options.  This plan boasts the following benefits:

  • The portion of the borrower’s income protected from being included in the calculation of the monthly payment is 225% of the federal poverty guideline, as opposed to the 150% offered by most other IDR plans.  This will yield the borrower a much lower monthly payment.
  • If the borrower’s monthly payment is not large enough to cover the accruing interest, the excess interest will be forgiven rather than being tacked onto the principal of the loan.  There will be no negative amortization!  Even if you only ever pay interest on the loan, the total balance due will never grow larger.  This is a game changer.  Gone are the days where a student borrows $40,000 for their education and then after years of payments find themselves owing $152,000.  The balance will never get bigger than where you started in repayment.
  • Married borrowers will have a way to remove their spouse’s income from the calculation of the monthly payment.  Borrowers will no longer have to make a choice between having the lowest monthly payment or legally wedding their soulmate.  If a borrower is married and wants to exclude their spouse’s income from the calculation, they simply need to file their federal income tax as married filing separately.

There are more changes to follow starting next summer, but the three listed above are already in place, and will have the greatest impact on law school alumni.  You can find a detailed description of the SAVE plan here, and a great description of how SAVE differs from the old REPAYE here.

Getting ready for student loan repayment after a three-and-a-half-year break will likely feel daunting.  You can find some guidelines here and here.  And your friendly neighborhood financial aid advisor is also here to provide help if you need it.

Big changes are arriving right now.  But with a little focus and a little help from available resources, this will be manageable.

 

This Pause Is Giving Me Pause

In March of 2020 everything changed in the world as we knew it.  Everything closed down.  Masks were pervasive.  Toilet paper was a hard-to-find commodity.  And my least favorite task was bathing the groceries.  But as the pandemic moved forward, we learned more about the virus.  Treatments and preventative vaccines were created.  And now everything feels a lot more like normal.  Well….almost everything.  Student loan repayment seems even more up in the air now than it did at the beginning of the pandemic.

In March 2020 the President announced a pause on federal student loan repayment, as well as setting the interest rate on all Federal Direct Student Loans to 0%.  This was supposed to last for a few months, until the public health emergency had passed.  But we all know now that the public health emergency did not end after a few months.  And neither did the loan repayment pause.  The pause has been extended several times.  It really looked like repayment (and the accrual of interest) was going to resume in January 2023.  It was supposed to coincide with the processing of loan relief in the form of up to $20,000 in forgiveness for qualifying borrowers.  But that loan forgiveness program got all tangled up in law suits and we’re really not sure when that will be resolved.  So the pause was extended yet again.  And this time the end date is a moving target.

Last week the U.S. Department of Education announced that the payment pause would end sixty days after a) they are allowed to implement the debt relief program, or b) the litigation is resolved.  If neither of these things happens by June 30, 2023, then repayment (and the accrual of interest) will resume 60 days after that.

Clear as mud?  Yep.  I have long thought that the federal student loan programs are too complicated for the average borrower to understand thoroughly.  There are too many different repayment plans.  There are origination fees deducted from loan amounts that make borrowing less transparent than it ought to be.  Loan servicers have a known history of not being up front with borrowers when they call with questions.  Loans come with something called a “variable fixed” interest rate, so each year brings a new loan with a different interest rate from prior loans.  And these interest rates are much higher than rates on car loans or home mortgages, which is very discouraging. It’s hard for me to keep up with all of the details, and I spend my whole life living in the student loan world.  I can’t imagine how intimidating it must be to a brand new college freshman.

But here we are.  Student loans were complicated enough before our country started using student loan borrowers as political punching bags.  Borrowers are now caught in the crossfire of arguments about many different policies.  I’m still not sure how I feel about the proposed debt relief program currently tied up in the courts.  But I feel very strongly that student loan borrowers shouldn’t be made to suffer because of the political battles of others.  And I guess that’s why the payment pause was extended yet again.

Will this be the last extension of the pandemic payment pause?  Only time will tell.  But if there is something to know, you can be sure I’ll share it here when that time comes.