The job does not seen to be iffy. Just had a review and it went well. I think we will do a 3 yr plan. Thanks All! |
I'm not. Just another indebted overly educated DC parent trying to dig myself out of debt. I graduated from my masters when I was 29. I'm finally making enough money to breath and for the last two years all raises go directly to the student loans. I'm so happy I am taking an aggressive position on this payback, mostly because once they are paid off I can really focus on my DCs college savings so they won't have o do what I did. Good luck! Short term hardships will result in huge long term gains in terms of interest not bring paid. (Btw- my interest rate is 5.5% with no chance to refinance). |
| Beat you all... my consolidated interest rate is 7.5%:'( consolidated in 1999 back when no one ever thought rates would get lower |
| OP, do you own a home? If so, get a home equity line that you could access if your partner becomes unemployed and you exhaust your savings before he finds a new job. Then focus on paying off the student loans. Of course, do not access the home equity line for any reason other than prolonged unemployment. |
| If you don't work, I wouldn't pay it off unless your spouse's job is super secure. Keep in mind that higher paying jobs take a lot longer to replace than lower paying ones. Took my DH 9 months and even then it was a slight paycut. Thank goodness we had a ton of savings because I was home with a newborn at the time. |