Get the inside scoop onpay off private student loans
Important News You Need To Read Before You Consolidate Student Loans!
You are paying way too much for your Federal student loans, and your sick and tired of never having extra cash on hand for the things you'd like to be doing, and feeling a bit disillusioned about what life after graduation would be like. Your not alone! Millions of College Graduates are having the same feelings, facing the same fears, and wondering what in the world happened. It wasn't supposed to be like this!
You may have had wide eyed visions of dinner parties and dining out. Driving a nice car and climbing your way up the corporate ladder. But it takes time to climb the ladder of success and in the meantime, once you graduate, your student loan grace periods begin to expire and before you know it, your deep in debt and in the red each month with no bling left over for any of those things you looked forward to being able to do.
So you work and you scrimp and you save, but now the payments are behind and the service charges and late fees are adding up and you're not earning enough yet to make up for it. So what happens now you ask?? STOP... that's what.. and listen closely if you want this seemingly endless circle to stop so you can catch your breath.
Have you ever considered the possibility of consolidating your student loans? When you consolidate, you take all your student loan payments and combine them into one new consolidated student loan, one with a much lower payment total than what you had been paying. The most common reason graduates choose to go this route is to lock in a new loan with a much lower interest rate, which in turn creates more cash flow for you each month and more cash on hand for other expenses you'd much rather be spending your hard earned money on. Choosing to consolidate your student loans can save you as much as 63% from what you were paying for your student loans prior to consolidating.
If this sounds like something you may consider doing, I hate to pressure you, but you need to be aware that if you are in fact thinking of consolidating your student loans, you need to act fast and do your research to find a reputable lender and apply as soon as possible because come July 1st 2006, just a short time from now, the Government is going to do it's yearly student loan interest rate adjustment and students all across the US are going to feel a crunch like no one has ever felt before. And it happens this year! Up until now, this has shown little effect on those desiring to consolidate their loans.
The US Senate has already announced that this is to be the single largest student loan interest rate hike we have ever seen. Federal Direct and Stafford loans alone will see a rate increase from 4.7% to 6.8% which equals ALOT of extra money flying out the window each month in interest alone! Their reason? The Senates $40 billion dollar deficit reduction plan, and the student loan industry will be hit the hardest.
You must take action and get busy right now! Make sure you know what kind of student loans you presently have (Direct loan, Stafford loan, private loans etc) and what the grace periods are for each student loan that you have and what your eligible for. Then go on a massive hunt for the most reputable and established Lender you can find and fill out an application so you can lock in today's low rates before the hammer falls on July 1st.
Dorene Patterson is author of many articles on how to Consolidate Student Loans that can be found at her website: http://How2Consolidate-Student-Loans.com/index.php
Get Important Free Information and Breaking News you need to read and understand before you Consolidate Student Loans. But you better hurry! The US Gov. is lowering the boom on Student Loans July 1st! 2006! Get the scoop before it's too late
More Useful Resource and Updates on pay off private student loans
- The crunch silences an Arbutus soap box (Baltimore Sun)
W hen Variety Auto Brokers closed its doors last month, one guy lost his business of 30 years. Five employees lost their jobs. And all of Southwest Baltimore lost a beacon of both political discourse and check-bouncing shame.
- Banking and Financial (Mondaq)
The staff of the SEC's Division of Investment Management (the "Staff") issued a no-action letter in which it provided assurances that it would not recommend enforcement action under Section 17(d) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended (the "1940 Act"), and Rule 17d-1 thereunder, if U.S. open-end investment companies registered under the 1940 Act (the "U.S. Funds") and certain foreign ...
- DTH Archives (The Daily Tar Heel)
Seniors registered for fewer than 12 credit hours next spring might have to re-evaluate their last semester plans. Students planning to underload will no longer be considered full-time students by UNC. An e-mail notifying seniors of the change was sent out last week.
- Color of Money Live (Washington Post)
Need advice about how to handle your personal finances? Whether the struggle is saving for retirement, organizing your bank files, or talking about money responsibility with your spouse or loved one, Post personal finance columnist Michelle Singletary offers her advice and answers your tough questions.
- Who were the original $1-a-year men? (The Globe and Mail)
And, how the NBER decided the U.S. is in recession
- Potomac Confidential (Washington Post)
Metro columnist Marc Fisher looks at the District's decision to open bars till 5 a.m. during Inauguration Week, the sad state of car sales in the area and the federal government's green light for extending Metro to Dulles.
|