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Kids and Money: Prepare to start repaying federal student loans [Column]

Now that the moratorium on federal student loan payments has been extended one final, final time, borrowers need to start preparing for the restart in five months.

Loan repayments, including the interest, have been on hold for borrowers with federal student loans since March 2020 when the pandemic took hold. The same with collections on defaulted loans.

The moratorium, which has been extended several times, was set to expire at the end of September. But the Department of Education has now extended it one last time through Jan. 31, 2022.

The repayment pause applies to about $1.4 trillion in federal student debt owed by about 43 million borrowers, Mark Kantrowitz, a student loan expert and author of “How to Appeal for More College Financial Aid” said in an interview.

Keep in mind that the monthly loan payments — the amount owed, the interest rate — will be the same in Feb. 1 as they were before the pandemic. The government just “put the loans in hibernation,” Kantrowitz said.

Federal loans, including the Stafford, Parent PLUS, and consolidation loans make up more than 90% of student loans outstanding, and they remain eligible for the final payment suspension and interest freeze provided they are owned by the Education Department.

Borrowers with private loans from banks and other financial institutions can’t take advantage of the extended moratorium, although some private lenders and loan servicing companies have offered some flexibility to borrowers who asked to suspend their payments as the pandemic worsened.

Here’ some advice from financial aid experts on how borrowers can prepare for the payment restart on Feb. 1, 2022:

Right now, the industry is going through a shakeout, which could lead to processing problems for borrowers. An estimated 10 million borrowers will have a new loan servicer next year because two companies — Granite State and FedLoan Servicing — have said they will not renew their servicing contracts when they expire at the end of this year.

If your servicing agent is changing, save a copy of your loan information, including the current balance and monthly payment amounts, so there’s a paper trail in case there’s a mix-up during the transfer to a new servicing firm, Kantrowitz said. Check your servicing company’s website or the Department of Education at StudentAid.gov.

Contact Steve Rosen: sbrosen1030@gmail.com.


Source: Berkshire mont

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