Each year, the Department of Education’s Federal Direct Loan Program lends more than 90% of all the money to undergraduate and graduate students, and parents borrow to pay for college. This article focuses primarily on loans for dependent undergraduates and their parents. The Federal Direct Loan program offers students the best terms to borrow for college. That may not be the case for parents.
To be eligible for a federal student or parent loan, students must file a FAFSA® form.
All other education loans are called private loans (a.k.a. private credit loans) which are made by any entity that is not the federal government. Private lenders include states (through state agencies or special not-for-profits), colleges, banks, credit unions, or other financial services firms. Each lender has its own respective loan application, criteria to determine if they will lend to you (a.k.a. your “creditworthiness”), and loan options with interest rates based on your creditworthiness.
All loans made under the Federal Direct Loan Program are fixed rate loans, which means that the rate will not increase or decrease over the life of the loan.
The fixed rate for Direct Loans changes on July 1st each year and is in effect for all federal loans made from July 1st through June 30th of the next year. For loans made between July 1, 2024 and June 30, 2025, the undergraduate Direct Loan rate is 6.53%. The PLUS loan rate is 9.08%.
Direct Loan interest rates are set by a formula which requires the U.S. Department of Education to add on 2.05% for undergraduate Direct Loans and 4.60% for PLUS Loans to the yield on 10-Year Treasury Note auctioned in May each year. On May 8, 2024, the 10-Year Treasury Note auctioned for 4.48% resulting in the updated interest rates.
This year’s 10-Year Treasury Auction result was 1.03% greater than last year’s auction which means higher interest rates for students and parents.
To be eligible for federal loans, the student going to college must file a FAFSA® form. Every student who files a FAFSA® form is eligible for a Federal Direct Loan and their parents for a PLUS Loan.
Students determined to have financial need are offered Subsidized Direct Loans, which do not accrue interest until the start of the repayment period, usually six months after separating from school. The Direct Loan Program also makes Unsubsidized Loans which require borrowers to either pay interest while they are in-school or add the accruing interest to the initial amount borrowed.
The amount students can borrow is limited by their year of study. Students with financial need are eligible for both Unsubsidized Loans and Subsidized Loans. Others are eligible to borrow Unsubsidized loans. All are subject to these maximums:
Dependent undergraduates are eligible to borrow no more than $31,000, with no more than $23,000 of subsidized loans.
Parents may borrow PLUS loans up to the cost of attendance as certified by the college.
In addition to appealing to the college for more grants and scholarships and/or having a student work during school to reduce the amount of debt, families should:
Please note that the word “generally” is used a lot. Check lenders’ web site to get the specifics of each private student loan offering.
The Family Picture: As parents compare federal PLUS benefits versus the added cost and inability to be released from the loan, they should keep the big picture in mind. Some helpful questions to consider:
If parents are comfortable borrowing, is there an alternative to the PLUS loan that is worth considering?
This year, state-based lenders will have a significant advantage when compared to the PLUS loan rate of 9.03% because of technical, but very favorable market conditions. To make loans, many of them offer tax-exempt bonds at interest rates that are now approximately 60% of Treasury rates. They add about 2% to their borrowing costs and will therefore be able to offer loans in the range of 6% to 7% to their top tier credit applicants (FICO scores greater than 750). Mid-tier (700 – 749) and lower credit tier borrowers (650 – 699) will also likely be offered loans well below 9.08%.
Generally, other lenders such as banks, credit unions and finance companies which borrower in taxable markets to make loans will also be able to offer many borrowers loan interest rates below the 9.08% PLUS loan rate.
Buyer Beware: Generally, private lenders offer fixed and variable rate loans. Be careful with variable rate loans. The starting rate will increase and decrease over time. A variable rate loan which may be very affordable today can become a burden if interest rates rise. Be sure to know how often the interest rate resets (most are monthly) and what the maximum interest rate is that the lender can charge (often the state usury rate, which can be very high). The phrase “Know before you owe” is particularly true for variable rate loans.
Student loans are not inherently bad, but they are serious obligations that should not be taken lightly and need to be understood before an e-signature is collected. College Planning Center hopes you keep this in mind: student loans should be the last resort, not the first option to pay for college.
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