CONGRATULATIONS, Class of 2007!
Expect a mailbox full of missives to help you transition from the college campus to the real world: congratulatory cards (with checks enclosed) from family and friends, a few job offers and plenty of enticements from lenders eager to handle your student loans.
Although the first two are certainly more welcome, it pays to spend time considering the latter. More than two-thirds of graduates leave college with student loan debt, according to the Department of Education. Their average tab: $19,200.
In recent years, as the variable interest rates on the Stafford loan dipped to historic lows of 2.77% (3.37% in repayment) in 2004, student loan advice for recent graduates could be summed up in a single word — consolidate. Not so for this year's grads, who face current rates of 6.62% during the in-school and grace periods, and 7.22% during repayment.
"The use of consolidation to lock in a low rate no longer applies," says Mark Kantrowitz, founder of FinAid.org. "Students have to be more proactive about getting the best deal."
Thanks to two recent changes, the Class of 2007 faces the added burden of mixed loans — some fixed rate, some variable, some already consolidated. (Loans disbursed after July 1, 2006, carry a fixed interest rate of 6.8%, while those disbursed prior have variable rates up to a maximum of 8.25%. That date also marked students' last chance to consolidate loans while still in school.)
To get started off right, here are seven considerations for this year's grads:
Not you? Before you gloat, consider joining their ranks. Consolidating before your six-month grace period runs out snags you a lower consolidation interest rate; currently 6.625% instead of the 7.25% you'd get post-grace. For a grad carrying a $20,000 balance, that's a difference of $1,795 in interest paid over the life of your loan.
With fixed-rate loans in the mix, consolidating may not work out to your advantage. Someone carrying $20,000 in Stafford loans — $15,000 consolidated at 6.625% and one $5,000, 6.8% loan — would pay a total of $7,458 over the life of the 10-year loans. That's $100 less than the total interest you'd pay by consolidating all the loans under a 10-year repayment schedule.