| by Dale Ronewicz
A Consolidation Loan allows you to combine your
federal student loans into a single loan with one
monthly payment, which can be significantly lower than
the payment required under the standard 10-year
repayment option. Under the Federal Family Education
Loan (FFEL) Program, banks, secondary markets, credit
unions, and other lenders provide the Consolidation
Loans. Under the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan
(Direct Loan) Program, the federal government provides
the loans.
Most federal education loans are eligible for
consolidation, including subsidized and unsubsidized
Direct and FFEL Stafford Loans, SLS, Federal Perkins
Loans, Federal Nursing Loans, and Health Education
Assistance Loans. Private education loans are not
eligible. PLUS Loan borrowers (parent borrowers) also
can consolidate their loans.
To apply for a Direct Loan Consolidation or an FFEL
Consolidation the borrower must contact the lender and
complete an application. Most lenders provide borrowers
with the ability to apply on-line or request an
application over the telephone. Once an application is
completed and submitted, the lender will request
information from the borrower’s other lenders or from
its own system to determine the amounts outstanding on
the borrowers loans. The borrower will then receive
notification about the consolidation loan, normal
consumer disclosures, the amount owed, and if
appropriate, where to make payments.
Always Consider the Cost
You should keep in mind that although consolidation can
simplify loan repayment and lower your monthly payment,
it also can significantly increase the total cost of
repaying your loans. Consolidation offers lower monthly
payments by giving borrowers up to 30 years to repay
their loans. So, you'll make more payments and pay more
in interest. In fact, in some situations consolidation
can double your total interest expense. If you don't
need monthly payment relief, you should compare the cost
of repaying your unconsolidated loans against the cost
of repaying a consolidation loan. You also should take
into account the impact of losing any borrower benefits
offered under non-consolidated repayment plans. Borrower
benefits, which may include interest rate discounts,
principal rebates, or some loan cancellation benefits
can significantly reduce the cost of repaying your
loans.
About
the Author: For Part II of this article The Pros and
Cons of Government Student Loan Consolidation please
visit: http://www.american-lenders.org/
Feel free to use this article. Please leave the link at
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Guide To Bad
Credit Loans
Guide To Bridging
Loans
Guide To Personal
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Guide To Secured
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