Student Loan Consolidation
By Ken MacKenzie
Why Consolidate Your Student Loans?
It's January of your senior year and time
to start thinking about all those loans you
took to help pay for college. Between Stafford
Loans, Perkins Loans and all the rest, between
subsidized and unsubsidized you begin to realize
that a year from now you will have run out
of grace period and have to start paying back
all those loans. You're going to be paying
back eight different loans at eight different
interest rates and eight terms. It's time
to start thinking about a student consolidation
loan.
A student consolidation loan could
be worth it just to simplify your repayment
schedules. But more importantly, if you
can get a loan with a lower interest rate
than you are paying on your school loans,
then you can save yourself some money.
If the consolidation loan extends the
length of your student loan payback term,
then it may have the added benefit of
lowering the monthly payment now (when
you aren't making a large salary). You
can always increase your payments as your
salary grows.
How to Consolidate Your Student Loans
After deciding to consolidate your student
loans, the next step is to figure out
how to go about it. You may have several
choices of lenders, and what you choose
could affect the amount you ultimately
pay. Choose carefully.
The Department of Education provides
the Federal Direct Consolidation Loans
Program. Numerous states have student
consolidation loans, some for your federal
loans and others for your state loans.
Then there are private lenders offering
consolidation loans as well. You might
first check with your current loan providers
to see what they have to offer. They may
have a better deal for current customers.
Federal Direct Consolidation Loans
Federal Direct Consolidation Loans are
run by the US Department of Education
and provide a means to combine multiple
Federal loans into one.
You can apply online for the Federal
Direct Program by visiting the FDCL website
at https://loanconsolidation.ed.gov/appentry/appindex.html.
State Student Consolidation Loans
Several states offer consolidation loans
as part of their education loan programs.
Check with your state to see if they have
a loan consolidation program.
Private Student Consolidation Loans
Private loans can not be consolidated
under the Federal Direct Plan. If you
can't qualify for the federal and state
student loan consolidation programs because
you have private loans, there are many
lenders who make private consolidation
loans available to students. Check with
your own lenders first to see if they
have a consolidation program.
Ken is a successful writer and online
entrepreneur. He has developed http://www.college-loans.us
as a portal for presenting articles,
information, resources, news and links
about college scholarships, grants and
loans.
Copyright 2006, Ken MacKenzie http://www.college-loans.us
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Ken_MacKenzie