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Here's an up-to-date report of
private student loans for students with fair credit
All About Student Loans A student loan is an unsecured loan made by lenders that receive government underwriting assistance. Without this government assistance, student loans would not be very practical. Lenders would find other more profitable arenas in which to loan their money. Nobody would be able to get a low interest student loan without the help of a parent with a substantial financial history and reasonable means. Like any government sponsored program, there are rules and regulations and red tape to deal with. In the case of student loan red tape, it all begins with a financial aid form called the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid).
This form establishes the students eligibility (or ineligibility) for all manner of student loan assistance, including low interest loans. This form can be filled out and submitted as a regular paper form, or it can be filled out and tracked online (much easier). The guidance office at your High School is likely to have a pile of these forms. Libraries and College Admissions offices are other places to look for the paper version of the form. If all else fails and you really want the paper version of the FAFSA, you can get one by calling 1-800-4-FED-AID.
Most people find it more convenient to simply log on to www.fafsa.ed.gov and submit the form electronically. By doing it this way you also automatically get a way to look in on the status of your application. Supposedly, doing the form online can make the process from one to two weeks faster than submitting the paper form. Either way, you will find that the form is relatively easy to fill out, and typically will require much of the same information that would be included in the parents tax returns. Student loans are also available to those who turn out to be ineligible for the regular unsecured low interest student loans. These other loans are normally called Parent Plus loans or private alternative loans, or just alternative loans. These are basically loans made with a co-signature from the parents. In effect its no different from a young person buying a car with a parents co-signature. Both the student and the parents are on the hook for repayment of the loan. Because of the government regulation involved with the unsecured student loans, this is one of the few types of loans that do not require a whole lot of shopping around. There is not a lot of variability in the interest rates and other features of the government sponsored loans. The same is not true for the Parent Plus loans or private alternative loans. With those you do need to shop around. So the first step is really to fill out a FAFSA form well in advance of the time tuition is due and use that to start your quest for college money. This will help you to determine what kind of student loans you are eligible for and assist you greatly in your loan shopping.
You can learn more about your options and see offers from some alternative loan student loan lenders at my website - http://www.creditcards-and-loans.com/student-loans.html
About the Author Jeff Pritchard is a webmaster with several informative websites and primary author of the new website www.creditcards-and-loans.com. This site is a supermarket for all types of credit and loans. You can learn about the options and differences between various kinds of loans and find all the best and latest loan offers
More Useful Resource and Updates on private student loans for students with fair credit
- Resolve Business Outsourcing Income Fund Reports Its Third Quarter Results (Marketwire via Yahoo! Finance)
Attention Business and Financial Editors:
- Another Student Loan Company Settles With New York (New York Times)
Goal Financial, which offered iPods, spa gift cards and other items to lure borrowers, will adopt a marketing code of conduct and pay $350,000 to a financial aid fund.
- Election letters (Nevada Appeal)
McCain's strategy is dishonest
- Another Student Loan Company Settles With New York (New York Times)
Goal Financial is the latest student loan company to have reached a settlement agreement with the New York attorney general, whose investigation of the loan industry found that some were using deceptive tactics and offering prizes to attract borrowers, The New York Times?s Jonathan D. Glater reported.
- AG report faults some Iowa Student Loan practices (The Des Moines Register)
The practices of the Iowa Student Loan Liquidity Corp. favored the goals of increasing access to loans and offering families a choice of loans over making the lowest-cost loans available to borrowers, according to Iowa Attorney General Tom Miller.
- Resolve Business Outsourcing Income Fund Reports Its Third Quarter Results (CCNMatthews via Yahoo! Finance)
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- How to Pay for an MBA (BusinessWeek Online via Yahoo! News)
Lindsey Aponte, a first-year student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Kenan-Flagler Business School, made all the right moves when it came to preparing her finances before entering the MBA program.
- Lehman Toxic Debt Advice Led Leipzig Bank to Ruin Via Dublin (Bloomberg)
Oct. 28 (Bloomberg) -- Teachers at the Clara Zetkin Middle School in Freiberg, Germany, were counting on a budget surplus to ease staff shortages across the state of Saxony.
- State report faults Iowa Student Loan work (The Des Moines Register)
The nonprofit?s business practices will be discussed Tuesday by a Legislature oversight committee.
- Live Web Chat (Washington Post)
The stock market volatility got you and your portfolio down?
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