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Funding Your Education: 2003-2004 Funding Your Education: 2003-2004 Funding Your Education: 2003-2004
Education After High School Funding Your Education: 2003-2004 Stafford Loans
Funding Your Education: 2003-2004 Funding Your Education: 2003-2004
Paying Tuition & Other Costs PLUS Loans (Parent Loans)
Funding Your Education: 2003-2004 Funding Your Education: 2003-2004
Applying for Financial Aid Stafford & PLUS Loan Questions
Funding Your Education: 2003-2004 Funding Your Education: 2003-2004
Eligibility Criteria Contacting Us
Funding Your Education: 2003-2004 Funding Your Education: 2003-2004
Important Deadlines Reducing the Cost of School
Funding Your Education: 2003-2004 Funding Your Education: 2003-2004
Federal Pell Grants Taking the Next Step
Funding Your Education: 2003-2004 Funding Your Education: 2003-2004
Campus-Based Aid Programs State Higher Education Agencies
Funding Your Education: 2003-2004 Funding Your Education: 2003-2004
Federal Students Aid Students Portal No Child Left Behind Website
 
Federal Students Aid Students Portal No Child Left Behind Website
Funding Your Education

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Funding Your Education

 

Funding Your Education
Funding Your Education
Funding Your Education

 
PLUS LOANS (PARENT LOANS)

PLUS Loans to meet students’ education costs are available through both the FFEL Program and the Direct Loan Program. Parents who have an acceptable credit history can borrow a PLUS Loan to pay the education expenses of a child who is a dependent student enrolled at least half time in an eligible program at an eligible school. (See applying for financial aid for a discussion of dependency status.)

HOW DO MY PARENTS GET A LOAN?

Your parents fill out a PLUS Loan application, available from your school’s financial aid office.

To be eligible to receive a PLUS Loan, your parents generally will be required to pass a credit check. A parent can’t be turned down for having no credit history—only for having an
adverse one. If your parents don’t pass the credit check, they may still be able to receive a loan if someone, such as a relative or friend who is able to pass the credit check, agrees to endorse the loan. An endorser promises to repay the loan if your parents fail to do so. Your parents may also qualify for a loan without passing the credit check if they can demonstrate that extenuating circumstances exist. You and your parents must also meet other general eligibility requirements for federal student financial aid.

HOW MUCH CAN MY PARENTS BORROW?
The yearly limit on a PLUS Loan is equal to your cost of attendance minus any other financial aid you receive. If your cost of attendance is $6,000, for example, and you receive
$4,000 in other financial aid, your parents may borrow up to $2,000.

WHO GETS MY PARENTS’ LOAN MONEY?
Your school will receive the money in at least two installments. No one payment may exceed half the loan amount. Your school might require your parents to endorse a disbursement check and send it back to the school. The school will then apply the money to your tuition and fees, room and board, and other school charges. If any loan money remains, your parents will receive the amount as a check or in cash, unless they authorize that it be released to you. Any remaining loan money must be used for your education expenses.

WHAT’S THE INTEREST RATE?
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The interest rate is variable (adjusted annually) but does not exceed 9 percent. For the 2002-2003 award year, the interest rate for PLUS Loans in repayment was 4.86 percent.
The interest rate is adjusted each year on July 1. Your parents will be notified of interest rate changes throughout the life of their loan. Interest is charged on the loan from the
date of the first disbursement until the loan is paid.

WHEN DO MY PARENTS BEGIN REPAYING THE LOAN?
Generally, the first payment is due within 60 days after the final loan disbursement for the period of enrollment for which you borrowed. There is no grace period for these loans. Interest begins to accumulate at the time the first disbursement is made, and your parents will begin repaying both the principal and interest while you’re in school.




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Funding Your Education
Funding Your Education