Anonymous wrote:Can you each get an individual loan, and pay the consolidated loan off that way? Like a HELOC or something at a very low interest rate?
Then you each have your separate loans to pay back.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t trust the word of any phone operator on the Navient side. They are so un-informed. Escalate to senior management at Navient and get it all in writing. It may be worth contacting a lawyer who specializes in student loan work.
Anonymous wrote:You could do what you’re considering but it doesn’t stop the creditor from coming after you. Let’s say this was the same facts but with a visa Debt. If Jane and John Sign a document saying that the remaining visa debit is now Jane’s sole liability Because John has paid his half of it upfront, then in the event that chain later defaulted, visa could and will still come after both of you. The reason? Visa was not a party to the new contract. So visa would come after you both and you could turn around and go after Jane to pay back what you overpaid. If she doesn’t have the money, well then good luck.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, OP. Anyone else reading this: DO NOT EVER CONSOLIDATE A FEDERAL STUDENT LOAN WITH ANYONE ELSE'S FEDERAL STUDENT LOAN.
Nothing, nothing, NOTHING they may promise you makes up for the protections you lose by doing this.
Wow yeah i had no idea that one could even do this!?!? Crazy. Good luck OP. I hope you find a solution.Anonymous wrote:Sorry, OP. Anyone else reading this: DO NOT EVER CONSOLIDATE A FEDERAL STUDENT LOAN WITH ANYONE ELSE'S FEDERAL STUDENT LOAN.
Nothing, nothing, NOTHING they may promise you makes up for the protections you lose by doing this.
Anonymous wrote:Wait - so you co-signed on a set of student loans with your spouse? Now you want out?
Pay them off.