Anonymous wrote:OP here - HHI is $220k. I’m on the PAYE program. I do not work in public service or government.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would pay the minimum for at least the next year and be extremely frugal with the rest of your money - max out retirement, IRAs, save for a down payment if you're not homeowners yet, build up your emergency fund. If a student loan forgiveness bill gets passed reevaluate - if $50k is forgiven for each of you, pay the rest off aggressively. If it's $10k/each, you might stick with PAYE. But spend this year making sure that you use the discretionary income you're not directing at your loans to improve your bottom line, and get a feel for what your life looks like directing all of your discretionary income at a financial goal instead of having cushion.
Op here - thanks. We already max out our 401k, and back door ira, we are homeowners and pay mortgage, we have 529s for both kids which we fund each month, and otherwise we put some in a brokerage account. Any thing else I should be doing that I’m not?
Anonymous wrote:God. I would live like a poor person and pay off my loans in 2 or 3 years. Probably live with my parents and do that. Of course I would max retirement too.
Anonymous wrote:I would pay the minimum for at least the next year and be extremely frugal with the rest of your money - max out retirement, IRAs, save for a down payment if you're not homeowners yet, build up your emergency fund. If a student loan forgiveness bill gets passed reevaluate - if $50k is forgiven for each of you, pay the rest off aggressively. If it's $10k/each, you might stick with PAYE. But spend this year making sure that you use the discretionary income you're not directing at your loans to improve your bottom line, and get a feel for what your life looks like directing all of your discretionary income at a financial goal instead of having cushion.
Anonymous wrote:What program is this? I don’t understand a debt repayment program that will let you invest money while not paying that much and then getting the debt forgiven after 20 years. It sounds like a good deal!
Anonymous wrote:What program is this? I don’t understand a debt repayment program that will let you invest money while not paying that much and then getting the debt forgiven after 20 years. It sounds like a good deal!
Anonymous wrote:I'd be very skeptical of the debt forgiveness based on past programs.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.cnbc.com/amp/2021/03/23/the-us-already-has-student-debt-forgivenessbut-barely-anyone-gets-it.html
"The National Consumer Law Center estimates that while approximately two million student loan borrowers have been in repayment for more than 20 years, just 32 borrowers have ever qualified for loan cancellation through the federal government's income-driven repayment program."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have $300,000 in grad school loans. Fed loans with interest rates between 5-8%. We are on an income drive plan currently which means we pay 10% of our discretionary income for 20 years and whatever is left over get forgive. The current monthly payment is $1600/month (although has been stopped because of COVID). I’m wondering if anyone on here can relate and has gotten rid of this burden what are your suggestions. And for those who don’t carry this weight, what are your thoughts? Should I try to make extra payments and pay it down quicker or should I invest in the market instead since most of it will be forgiven anyway? TIA
Refinance that interest rate is ridiculous.
Not a good idea if she's in some sort of forgiveness program.
And if it's PSLF, there is no tax hit.
I was forgiven $150k last year through the PSLF program, so it happens.
Anonymous wrote:
In 2018, the Department of Education released data that indicated 29,000 borrowers had applied to have their student loans forgiven under PSLF, but only 96 received forgiveness. That means that over 99% of borrowers who applied were rejected
In response, Congress authorized an expansion of the program. However, a 2019 Government Accountability Office report found that approximately 99% of loan-forgiveness requests under that newly expanded program were rejected