Anonymous wrote:HHI 400k. I’m a teacher and my loan balance (78k) was forgiven during the pause. (I also had a 100k private loan balance that I paid off before we got married.) We paid off my husband’s loans the last day of the pause (62k). He left government after 9 years, so we paid the loans instead of doing forgiveness for him. The salary difference was substantial enough that it made sense.
So, $0. But a long road to get here.
Anonymous wrote:HHI 400k. I’m a teacher and my loan balance (78k) was forgiven during the pause. (I also had a 100k private loan balance that I paid off before we got married.) We paid off my husband’s loans the last day of the pause (62k). He left government after 9 years, so we paid the loans instead of doing forgiveness for him. The salary difference was substantial enough that it made sense.
So, $0. But a long road to get here.
Anonymous wrote:Balance is now 13k. I paid while interest free during the pause ( savings account has gnats- oh well).
Beginning October - I’ll be paying $205. What about you?
Extra points ( what’s your gross income?) mine: $119k
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do undergrads borrow more than the maximum that a student loan will allow? I thought the max was around $28k over four years.
That's federal loans for undergrads. More than that would be private loans, usually co-signed by a parent, parent loans that the parents are expecting the student to pay, and/or grad school loans.
I generally think if you borrowed money you should pay it back. We made choices to go to lower cost schools to avoid loans so I don't have a lot of sympathy for those who took the line that you should just take out loans to go to a higher ranked school. Or, in the last couple years, said just borrow money because it will be forgiven.
But, I also think there should be resources for bankruptcy or resetting to a lower interest rate and those who qualify for public service forgiveness should absolutely get that. I know a lot of people were screwed over by that process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[
At your income level, that's really gross you are getting loan forgiveness. That's not exactly a real non-profit salary.
LOL has anyone told you about doctors and loan forgiveness?? If you think this is gross…
Anonymous wrote:[
At your income level, that's really gross you are getting loan forgiveness. That's not exactly a real non-profit salary.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everybody set up your auto-pay for .25% interest reduction.
We didn’t do this for the last 7 years (well 2 years of it was the National forbearance, so 5 years).
I always thought it didn’t make a difference, was afraid of setting it automatically, meaning we wouldn’t pay the extra we really need to pay. We always pay like 2000 extra monthly because the minimums make it rise.
But that was stupid, I don’t know why we didn’t do it the first 5 years.
I set it up last week. Doesn’t make a massive difference, right?, but I’ll keep every dollar I can. Or maybe it does add up.. I’ll go do some math
You aren't exactly keeping money given the interest you are paying over the years and then having to pay them off when your kids are in college makes it even harder.