Comparing Discounts on Federal Student LoansThe best way to compare prices on a student loan is to match up the interest rates with all other factors held equal. But when lenders offer different types of discounts at different points in the repayment process, comparisons aren’t easy. How do you compare a fee reduction with a lower interest rate? What about an interest rate reduction that doesn’t kick in until the fifth year of the loan? The table below shows how to compare some typical types of discounts offered by companies that provide federal student loans. The most common federal student loans (Stafford loans) have a fixed 6.8% interest rate before any discount.
All assume a standard 10-year repayment period (120 payments) and a fixed interest rate of 6.80% (before any discount). Equivalent values are interest rate reductions. The table shows that a four-percent reduction in fees is roughly worth a one-percent reduction in the overall interest rate. A reduced interest rate that takes effect after the first four years of a ten-year repayment term is one-third as valuable as a lower interest rate for the entire term of the loan. Reductions in principal that occur after four years are even less valuable: a lender would have to offer an eight-percent reduction for it to be worth a one-percent reduction in the overall interest rate on a loan. Warning about “on-time payment” discounts: Only a minority of borrowers actually qualify for lender discounts that take effect after a particular number of “on-time payments.” Generally, these offers require borrowers to stick to the original payment schedule without even one late or adjusted payment, a feat few achieve. And even when borrowers manage to get the discount, they can lose it if they ever miss or change a payment later on. Also, these discounts are usually not included in the promissory note, (the contract between the borrower and lender), which means that the discount rules can change or disappear at any time. To get a detailed and customized assessment of how much certain discounts could be worth on a particular loan, see FinAid!'s Loan Discount Analyzer. |