If you’re struggling to meet your basic financial obligations due to student loan payments, you aren’t alone. The good news is that you have a variety of options available for helping you deal with student loans.
A lot of people are finding that their plans for the future, including homeownership, changing jobs, or starting families, are affected by how much money they have available each month after making their monthly student loan payments.
With all the changes in student loan legislation, it has become increasingly difficult to make an informed decision about whether you should maintain your current repayment plan, refinance your loan, or stop making payments for now and reassess your situation at a later date.
This is why understanding repayment and relief options matters. Not in a theoretical way, but in the “how do I keep my finances stable without losing sleep” way.
Most people will begin with the basic 10-year payment plan, and then life can happen. Dips in income, kids being born, job changes, all can alter the budget. It is often at that time when someone may say I can no longer make my payment. It now feels like squeezing water out of a rock.
With income-driven repayment (IDR) plans, your monthly payments depend on how much money you make and who is in your family, so during these times of uncertainty, they could slightly ease the burden that your financial obligations put on you. The downside is that lower payments sometimes mean you will end up paying more in interest because of how compound interest works when there is too much room for it to grow.
Refinancing is an alternative choice; however, the options available are not necessarily suitable for all borrowers. With a high enough credit score and sufficient income, refinancing may reduce your interest rate.
Unfortunately, if you have undergone the refinancing process, you will no longer have access to Federal benefits such as Grace Periods, Income Driven Repayment Plans (IDR), or possible Loan Forgiveness through the Federal Student Loan Program.
Consequently, once your loan has been refinanced, the newly refinanced loan will be governed by private-lender rules, which are generally much stricter than federal requirements.
Student loan relief gets a lot of attention, especially online, where headlines tend to promise sweeping forgiveness or overnight solutions. In reality, relief exists, but it comes with requirements, paperwork, and a need to read instructions carefully.
Each path has its own challenges.
For example, PSLF has tripped up thousands of borrowers because one form was filled out incorrectly or because their loans weren’t consolidated at the right time. It’s not that the programs are impossible to navigate. They just require precision, patience, and occasionally someone to double-check the fine print.
Student loan debt might not seem like a big deal, but it can have a major impact on your credit. It affects your overall score, as well as your debt-to-income ratios. When payments spike or default becomes a risk, the rest of a borrower’s financial life can wobble.
Default, in particular, brings a harsh set of consequences: collections, wage garnishment, and a credit hit that follows you around like a persistent shadow. Many borrowers don’t realize how quickly default timelines move or how few warnings arrive before the consequences kick in.
If you’re feeling overwhelmed by student loan debt, you might wonder if bankruptcy could help.
The answer?
Maybe.
While student loans are harder to discharge than other debts, the door isn’t completely shut. Courts evaluate “undue hardship” to determine whether or not student loan debt is dischargeable in bankruptcy, but the process is still evidence-heavy and rarely straightforward.
The key is understanding that bankruptcy won’t magically eliminate student debt, but it can address everything else weighing down your finances and make repayment far more manageable.
If your student loans are beginning to dominate your financial world, you may want to gain a better understanding of the potential choices available to you. Let our firm help you uncover all of your options, find out which of the legitimate programs would benefit you, and put together an overall strategy to help secure both your current financial health and your future goals.
To discuss your situation or schedule a time to learn more about bankruptcy and how it could affect student loan debt, contact R. Flay Cabiness, II, P.C. at (912) 417-5041 (Brunswick, GA); (912) 809-2141 (Hazlehurst, GA) or (912) 324-3176 (Jesup, GA) to schedule a consultation.
Most people thinking about bankruptcy know they’re overwhelmed by debt, but they aren’t always sure…
Side hustles used to be simple. You could earn a little extra cash working flexible…
In a student loan hardship case, not all financial struggles are treated equally. Courts focus…
Medical debt rarely starts with a big decision to take on an expense. It starts…
Student loans are often described as “non-dischargeable.” That phrase gets repeated so often that many…
If you’re carrying student loan debt, you’re not alone. Millions of borrowers are juggling payments…