Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, what kind of degree do you have and do you make? Just trying to wrap my head around the amount of student loan debt you have.
Not OP but my husband had almost this much student loan debt.
Just from law school, since he had a full ride to college.
This was twenty years ago.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ sorry, just read the rest of your post and saw you refi’d so PSLF is off the table. Why not pursue PSLF when you had the chance?
What is the point in discussing this? What's done is done.
To add to the community knowledge base. OP might have had a perfectly good reason in forgoing PSLF and the rest of us might learn something.
NP. Many of those who once thought straight old government work would qualify for PSLF have been sadly disappointed when they are denied the repayment after 10 years of work. PSLF is for very specific public interest jobs, many of which wouldn't come with a six-figure salary. I think it was reported that 95% of those who applied in the last year or two (as the program has only been around long enough for a few cohorts to actually have completed their 10 years of work) were denied. That would be a punch to the gut, for sure.
I was wrong. It's apparently 99%
https://www.forbes.com/sites/zackfriedman/2018/09/24/public-service-loan-forgiveness-rejected/#305721e71824
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ sorry, just read the rest of your post and saw you refi’d so PSLF is off the table. Why not pursue PSLF when you had the chance?
What is the point in discussing this? What's done is done.
To add to the community knowledge base. OP might have had a perfectly good reason in forgoing PSLF and the rest of us might learn something.
NP. Many of those who once thought straight old government work would qualify for PSLF have been sadly disappointed when they are denied the repayment after 10 years of work. PSLF is for very specific public interest jobs, many of which wouldn't come with a six-figure salary. I think it was reported that 95% of those who applied in the last year or two (as the program has only been around long enough for a few cohorts to actually have completed their 10 years of work) were denied. That would be a punch to the gut, for sure.
I was wrong. It's apparently 99%
https://www.forbes.com/sites/zackfriedman/2018/09/24/public-service-loan-forgiveness-rejected/#305721e71824
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ sorry, just read the rest of your post and saw you refi’d so PSLF is off the table. Why not pursue PSLF when you had the chance?
What is the point in discussing this? What's done is done.
To add to the community knowledge base. OP might have had a perfectly good reason in forgoing PSLF and the rest of us might learn something.
NP. Many of those who once thought straight old government work would qualify for PSLF have been sadly disappointed when they are denied the repayment after 10 years of work. PSLF is for very specific public interest jobs, many of which wouldn't come with a six-figure salary. I think it was reported that 95% of those who applied in the last year or two (as the program has only been around long enough for a few cohorts to actually have completed their 10 years of work) were denied. That would be a punch to the gut, for sure.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ sorry, just read the rest of your post and saw you refi’d so PSLF is off the table. Why not pursue PSLF when you had the chance?
What is the point in discussing this? What's done is done.
To add to the community knowledge base. OP might have had a perfectly good reason in forgoing PSLF and the rest of us might learn something.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ sorry, just read the rest of your post and saw you refi’d so PSLF is off the table. Why not pursue PSLF when you had the chance?
What is the point in discussing this? What's done is done.
Anonymous wrote:^ sorry, just read the rest of your post and saw you refi’d so PSLF is off the table. Why not pursue PSLF when you had the chance?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - it's law school (HYSCCN) debt. Three years of loans to cover tuition only with interest accruing before I went into repayment. I took out $150k, decided not to do big law, and graduated with $175k because of interest. I'm a government attorney now making very low six figures with a combined HHI around $250k. My consolidated interest rate was about 7.5% before I refinanced with SoFi and the interest was just making it impossible to put a dent in the principle.
Yes, the extra payments go toward the principle. I spoke to Mohela (SoFi) today and they gave me instructions for spreading out the additional payment. They have to be individual payments, so I'll set up weekly auto bill through my bank and have already designated that all payments go to the principle.
+1Anonymous wrote:Why didn’t you do PAYE wtf
Anonymous wrote:OP here - it's law school (HYSCCN) debt. Three years of loans to cover tuition only with interest accruing before I went into repayment. I took out $150k, decided not to do big law, and graduated with $175k because of interest. I'm a government attorney now making very low six figures with a combined HHI around $250k. My consolidated interest rate was about 7.5% before I refinanced with SoFi and the interest was just making it impossible to put a dent in the principle.
Yes, the extra payments go toward the principle. I spoke to Mohela (SoFi) today and they gave me instructions for spreading out the additional payment. They have to be individual payments, so I'll set up a weekly auto bill through my bank and have already designated that all payments go to the principle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have any home equity that you could refinance them into?
Uh why would you change unsecured debt into secured debt?!?!?
Do student loans count as unsecured debt when they're not dischargable in bankruptcy?