New Debt Relief for Student-Loan Borrowers

Debt relief for student-loan borrowers

The Department of Education is beginning a program to help students with debt relief. The department is allowing people to apply for a program that will cap monthly student loan payments based on income, and forgive any balances still there are 25 years. If students are working in the public service sector, their loans could be forgiven after just 10 years.

The program is called IBR (Income Based Repayment) program. It is determined by the person's income and the amount of their loans. The Department of Education is setting up a website, www.ibrinfo.org, to answer questions and help borrowers with the application process. The website should be available and fully functional in coming weeks. Lauren Asher, President of the Institute for College Access and Success, stated, "It's a way to borrow for college without going to the poor house.”

The beginning of the program

This new Department of Education program comes from the Education Department’s College Cost Reduction and Access Act of 2007, which authorized a program catering to the incomes of borrowers at FFEL, (Federal Family Education Loan), and Stafford loan levels. In this new program, monthly payments are capped around 10% of the borrowers' income and don't exceed 15% of annual income above $ 16,000. Those earning under $ 16,000 aren't required to make monthly payments.

The goal of the program

The goal of this program is to provide debt relief for people who have student loans and modest to low incomes. The IBR program stretches the payments over a longer period of time, thus bringing payments down. Although consumers won’t see savings throughout the course of the loan’s lifetime, they will have smaller payments to manage monthly without hurting their credit scores. Asher added, “IBR can lower costs and provide light at the end of the tunnel for such borrowers. It gives them a greater flexibility to save for retirement, buy a home or even pay for their own children’s education.”

Consumers must choose wisely

It’s up to consumers to do some homework, however, to see if this program is right for them. In some cases, the IBR program could inflate the loan to more than it would have been originally. There are some accounts where accruing interest increases the overall cost of the loan, substantially. Also, since most student loans should be paid off within 25 years, this aspect of the program might not be beneficial to everyone.

Mark Kantrowitz, publisher of FinAid.org, stated that people can “save on interest costs more effectively by paying off loans faster." Kantrowitz also stated that using the FinAid.org website can help consumers track their financial aid industry data to see if their payments are comparable to the current standard.

After approval

One additional note: If consumers have salary increases that disqualifies them for the program, they will be responsible for the cost of the loan and the additional interest accrued up to that point. But even then, the monthly payments could not exceed what they would have been under a standard repayment plan and consumers always have the option of paying off their loans faster.

The Department of Education is working to help consumers with student loans and finding debt relief. The IBR program might be a great solution for people with ridiculous student loan payments. Some research and wise decision-making can help consumers bring their finances under control and find debt relief.

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This entry was posted on Saturday, December 19th, 2009 at 3:38 pm and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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