Welcome to Loans Guide
Federal Student Loans Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
Direct Loans For Students
from:Direct loans for full and part time students are an alternative loan option that typical Stafford or Perkins loans that are done through private loan companies by the federal government. Direct loans differ from these loans because the funds are provided directly from the Department of Education to the student, without the use of a loan company or agency. Direct loans are very similar to the typical Stafford or Perkins loans and can be either subsidized or unsubsidized, depending on the financial ability of the student and what type of loan they will qualify.
Students applying for either federal government student loans or direct loans have to complete the same process, which starts with completing an online FAFSA or Free Application for Federal Student Aid. This form will identify the student as either dependent, or requiring information and signatures of the parents, or independent, not requiring this information. It will also provide information on the schools you are considering as well as the amounts of loans that you can qualify for based on all other types of grants, scholarships and other funding sources. Once you have received your
SAR or student aid report and your school also receives the same information you are then able to decide if direct loans are the best option.
One difference between direct loans for students and traditional federal government loans is that all students are required to sign a Master Promissory Note or MPN. This note basically is a contract stating that you will pay back the loan to the Department of Education as per the terms of the loan agreement. There is no option to modify these conditions once the MPN has been signed and submitted, so it is very important to ensure that you understand all terms and conditions contained in the terms of the loan.
All direct loans are capped at a specific amount per year, depending on whether or not the student is categorized as dependent or independent. Independent students receive a higher loan amount per year, although only a portion of that amount can be subsidized. Subsidized loans do not get charged interest while the student is in school as well as during grace and deferment periods of the loan. Dependent students may or may not be subsidized up to the total amount of the loan per year.
Direct loans have a set interest rate, plus they also have a loan fee that will be up to four percent of the total amount of the loan. This loan fee is used to help keep the program functioning plus it will also help to balance out any differences in the fixed interest rate of the loan over the variable interest rate of the market.
Federal Student Loans News
As Student Loan Default Rates Rise, Is the Law School Bubble Bursting?
Here at the Student Loan Ranger, we recently read about Educational Credit Management, a Minnesota nonprofit that is earning commissions of up to 31 percent for collecting on defaulted student loans. Seven of their employees earned more than $400,000 in 2010, according to the San Francisco Chronicle.
Read more...Private Student Loans Are Becoming More Competitive
Private lenders are moving into the market for fixed-rate student loans and starting to compete directly against government options
Read more...Student loans: Pay them off, or invest elsewhere?
Student loans at currently low interest rates should be paid off as quickly as possible, because there aren't many better investments out there. Student loans are question one in this week's mailbag.
Read more...Discover Announces Fixed-Rate Private Student Loans
Discover Student Loans, one of the largest originators of private student loans in the United States, announced today new fixed-rate loans for undergraduate and graduate students w
Read more...Student Loan Price War: Banks vs. Feds
Real-Time Advice: The fixed rates offered by some banks now undercut the historically lower-priced federal student loans.
Read more...

