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Student Loan Consolidation:

School Loan Consolidation is a practical repayment tool that refinances your school loans into one loan, significantly reducing your monthly payment. Take a look at how much you can save each month with our student loan consolidation calculator.

Free Non-Student Loan Debt Consolidation

Do you have more debt outside of student loans? Please request a free debt consultation today. Consolidate your debt into one lower payment, avoid bankruptcy, and be debt free in as little as 12-48 months. Get Started Now!

 


How much can you save each month?

If you consolidate student loans right now, you could save hundreds of dollars a month. Here's a quick chart showing how much you could save on your monthly payments:

Total Loans Current Payment After Consolidation Monthly Savings
$30,000.00 $342.48 $227.22 $115.26!
$40,000.00 $456.64 $275.10 $181.53!
$50,000.00 $570.80 $343.88 $226.92!
$75,000.00 $856.20 $483.96 $372.24!
$100,000.00 $1,141.59 $645.28 $496.32!

 

Are there any disadvantages to getting a consolidation loan?

YES, there could be.

Consolidation is used as a debt management tool and is ideal for those who are having difficulty making their monthly payments. It is designed to extend out your loan terms and...

Does Consolidation hurt my credit?

NO. How bout that? You just read the worlds shortest blog. I may be a man of few words, actually just one word, but my words are even more powerful than the semi-popular teenage alien...

Federal student loan consolidation

Thank you for your interest in Student Loan Consolidation, the nation’s leading provider of saving- and paying-for-college programs. Severe legislative cuts made by Congress made federal student loan consolidation uneconomical. This, combined with the credit market deterioration, has caused us to suspend participation in the federal consolidation loan program.

Sallie Mae is committed to the federal student loan program and offers a variety of federal student loans and repayment options. If you would like to learn more about the various repayment options that can help you manage your monthly payment amount, please call a repayment specialist at (866) 457-6918.

Sallie Mae’s mission is to expand access to college and to ensure no student is denied the opportunity to pursue their dreams. This decision allows us to direct our resources on maximizing college access for more students and parents.

Sallie Mae reserves the right to modify or discontinue loan programs at any time without notice.


Student Loan Consolidation

Consolidation Loans combine several student or parent loans into one bigger loan from a single lender, which is then used to pay off the balances on the other loans. It is very similar to refinancing a mortgage. Consolidation loans are available for most federal loans, including FFELP (Stafford, PLUS and SLS), FISL, Perkins, Health Professional Student Loans, NSL, HEAL, Guaranteed Student Loans and Direct loans. Some lenders offer private consolidation loans for private education loans as well.

A separate page provides a comparison chart of consolidation loan discounts.

Interest Rates

The interest rate on a consolidation loan is the weighted average of the interest rates on the loans being consolidated, rounded up to the nearest 1/8 of a percent and capped at 8.25%.

For example, suppose a student has just unsubsidized Stafford Loans originated on or after July 1, 2006. These loans have a fixed interest rate of 6.8%. When they are consolidated by themselves, the consolidation loan will have an interest rate of 6 and 7/8ths of a percent, or 6.875%. So the interest rate increases only slightly.

If the borrower has a mix of loans with different interest rates, the weighted average will be somewhere in between. For example, if the borrower has $5,000 of Perkins Loans (at 5.0%) and $10,000 of unsubsidized Stafford Loans (at 6.8%), the weighted average is

 


$5,000 * 5.0% + $10,000 * 6.8%
------------------------------ = 6.2%
$5,000 + $10,000

 

This weighted average, 6.2%, is then rounded up to the nearest 1/8th of a percent, yielding a consolidation loan interest rate of 6.25%.

Note that the weighted average does not fundamentally alter the underlying cost of the loan. It preserves the cost structure by including each interest rate to the extent that it applies to part of the overall loan balance. For example, the consolidation loan in the previous paragraph says that of the $15,000 consolidation loan balance, $5,000 will be at 5.0% and $10,000 at 6.8%, yielding an equivalent interest rate of 6.2%.

If you are consolidating loans with different interest rates, the weighted average interest rate will always be in between. Don't be fooled if someone tries to suggest that this will save you money by getting you a lower interest rate. The interest rate may be lower than the highest of your interest rates, but it is also higher than the lowest of your interest rates. More importantly, the amount of interest you pay over the lifetime of the loan will be about the same.

 


(For the mathematically inclined, there is a slight difference due to the different shapes of amortization curves at each interest rate. In the example given above on a 10 year term, $10,000 at 6.8% has a monthly payment of $115.08 and total interest paid of $3,809.66, $5,000 at 5.0% has a monthly payment of $53.03 and total interest paid of $1,364.03. If you add these, you obtain a total monthly payment of $168.11 and a total interest paid of $5,173.69. Using the weighted average, $15,000 at 6.2% has a monthly payment of $168.04 and a total interest paid of $5,165.01. So using a weighted average yields a very small reduction in the monthly payment (in this case, 7 cents) and in the total interest paid ($8.68) due to a kind of triangle law. Of course, when you consolidate the interest rate is rounded up to the nearest 1/8th of a point, so $15,000 at 6.25% has monthly payments of $168.42 and total interest of $5,210.42, yielding a slight increase. So you pay a tiny bit of a premium for consolidation, due to the rounding up of the interest rate.

The PLUS loan interest rate loophole can reduce the interest rate on 8.5% fixed rate PLUS loans by 0.25% through consolidation.

If you were deferring the interest on an unsubsidized Stafford Loan by capitalizing it, most lenders will add the capitalized interest to principal when you consolidate. (Lenders can capitalize interest at most quarterly, but most capitalize it once when the loans enter repayment or at other loan status changes. :-)