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Bad credit student loans becoming more popular

Friday, December 9th, 2011

NEW YORK, NY
- (IBWire.com November 28, 2011) – Learning in the US is more typically than
not, remarkably costly as well as there are couple students who can finance
their education and learning without some kind of a loan. College students with
poor credit history may find it complicated to safeguard a loan. However, it is
not entirely inconceivable to have a loan by having bad credit scores, supplied
students are prepared to take the time as well as effort to research their
possibilities accurately.

Students can
easily begin the process of safeguarding a loan by filing a FAFSA application.
FAFSA is an online Free Application for Federal College student Advice. This
application is fashioned to effectively assess the monetary condition of
applicants as well as figure out if they are qualified for any authorities’ advice.

Regardless
of having an unsatisfactory credit history, college students might find out
that the authorities has loan programs, which satisfy their requirements as
well as demands. For instance, there are study and earn loan programs that
permit students to make cash to pay their education costs through a project
developed by the government. Some students might discover themselves qualified
for a Pell Grant, which is more or less free cash, for the reason that it does
not have to be ever before repaid like in the situation of a loan. It is
feasible to locate precise details concerning FAFSA as well as download the
FAFSA application from their site.

The
application procedure is simple so as to permit college students to follow it
easily. Approximately all formalities connected by having the approval of loans
for college students with bad credit are managed online. The application form
has been produced in such a way that it is not time consuming.

There are
additional options also that are open to college students by having
unsatisfactory credit history.
If it so takes place that things do not works out with FAFSA or if the funds
safeguarded with them are inadequate, at that point, there are businesses
students can easily turn to for advice and support. There are multiple
businesses that profess to be devoted to aiding students by having poor credit
in locating a lending answer, consisting of the reason of funding education and
learning. There are some businesses that help college students look for additional
types of economic support, such as foundation grants and government grants.

For
more information about bad credit student loans and student loans for bad credit
please visit the below website.

http://badcreditstudentloans.cc/

Who’s making a killing off student loans?

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

Underneath the now-iconic red sculpture at Liberty Plaza, now cleared of tents and ringed by barricades plastic-cuffed together, several “students” stood draped in fake chains over their caps and gowns, brandishing debt bills instead of diplomas.

They might have been performing, as part of a press conference unveiling a national student debt refusal pledge, but the dramatization of what happens upon graduation to many of Americas students was spot-on. Despite a few moves by the Obama administration in past years and even recent months to lessen the burden of student loans, many graduates are still saddled with more debt than they can conceivably pay back and have little hope of finding a good job in the current economy.

Monday saw protests against tuition hikes on either end of the country; at New Yorks Baruch College of the City University of New York, the Board of Trustees voted for another tuition hike and according to reports, a student kicked off the days actions by burning his Sallie Mae student loan bill. University of Californis, Davis, responding to the brutal pepper-spraying of students last week, also kept its focus on economic issues, chanting, No cuts, no fees, education must be free, and reportedly shutting down the financial aid building.

The talk of debt refusal or debt strikes, as I reported just recently, has ratcheted up along with the momentum of the Occupy Wall Street movement, as the occupiers made the connection between Wall Street bankers and student debt right down to the bailouts, as student lenders received a bailout of their own from the federal government, which handed over billions in taxpayer dollars to the banks and lenders in exchange for loans that could no longer be sold on the secondary market.

Recent grads with mountains of debt know that without their tax dollars, these big lenders wouldnt continue to exist. They want their loans forgiven or at least written down, and they think the lenders should pay. The principles laid out on the OccupyStudentDebtCampaign site call for free tuition at public universities, an end to interest on student loans, and for private and for-profit institutions to open their books so that students know how their money is being spent.

As of 2010, the government directly lends up to $31,000 to students for their undergraduate years. Yet that total isnt even a years tuition at many schools, let alone enough to cover living expenses and textbooks for four full years. As the economic crisis continues to stifle the economy and strangle state budgets, even public universities are seeing tuition hikes — the students pepper-sprayed at UC Davis were protesting a proposed hike in their tuition a full 81 percent in four years. So many students turn to private lenders to fill the gap between what the government will provide and what they realistically need to pay for school. Though those private lenders no longer get direct government subsidies, many of them still have billions on the books in federally subsidized debt, and even the private loans (often at variable interest rates, vulnerable to hikes when borrowers can least afford them) still have protections unlike almost any other type of debt, as student loans cannot be discharged in bankruptcy.

Jon Walker at FireDogLake described the now-defunct federally subsidized private lending system thus:

The Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFEL) was a classic lemon socialism program. It provided a nearly total government guarantee for  private student loans. If the loans did well, the large financial companies got the profit, if they didn’t preform, the government socialized the loses. These broken incentives spurred risky behavior from the companies.

“Student loans are among the most lucrative you can make because the borrower has no protections and the creditor is afforded extraordinary powers,” noted Andrew Ross, New York University professor and labor expert, at the student debt press conference. Ross spoke, too, of the need for professors to work in solidarity with the students on this issue since their salaries are paid through the debt of their students.

“Our public universities, once the democratic gold standard worldwide, are increasingly and ruinously dependent on debt financing from the people they are supposed to serve,” he said.

So just who are the lenders profiting from the massive student debt load?

You already know some of the names: JPMorgan Chase, U.S Bank, Citi, Bank of America. Others are non-bank student lenders. What all of them have in common, though, is that their practices are shrouded in secrecy. A recent release from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the brainchild of now-Senate candidate Elizabeth Warren, called for an investigation into the industry:

It has been operating in the shadows for too long, Raj Date, the Treasury Department adviser who is running the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, said in a release. Shedding light on this industry will benefit students, lenders, and the market as a whole.

Here, we take a look at five of the lenders raking in the cash off the backs of the USs students.

1. Sallie Mae

The SLM Corp., better known as Sallie Mae (and originally called the Student Loan Marketing Association), is the largest student lender in the United States. It was created in 1972 as a government-sponsored enterprise, but fully privatized in 2004. It also services loans provided by the federal government, and holds, services and collects loans made under the now-discontinued Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP), the federally subsidized private lending program that was recently replaced with direct federal loans. These loans were, up until the end of the program, Sallie Maes main source of income.

And just like in the mortgage market, Sallie Mae has been accused of making “subprime” loans to borrowers who will be attending for-profit or trade schools that have low graduation rates, making the loans a bad risk. Stephen Burd at the New America Foundations Higher Ed Watch wrote in 2008, “Still, Sallie Mae wont overtly admit fault and poor management. Instead, the company and its promoters on Wall Street have been testing another explanation for its difficulties. An analyst with CreditSights Inc., in New York, recently tried it out when he told Bloomberg.com that the loan giant had been blind-sided by the rising default and delinquency rates on the subprime private loans it had made to low-income and working-class students attending trade school of dubious quality.”

The last year that the FFELP existed, Sallie Mae held a frightening $154.1 billion in FFELP loans.

Like all of the student lenders, in 2008, Sallie Mae got what amounted to a sizable government bailout from the Ensuring Continued Access to Student Loans Act (ECASLA), which the Campaign for Americas Future described in a report as one that “allowed lenders like Sallie Mae to sell loans back to the Department of Education through a number of loan-purchase programs.” On the strength of that government bailout, the companys profits surged to $324 million.

The CEO of Sallie Mae, Albert Lord, according to CAP “has reaped more than $225 million from the student loan business over the course of his career. In 2008, even as profits declined, Lord received $4.7 million in total compensation. He has used a portion of the proceeds to build himself a private golf course.”

Sallie Mae has spent millions lobbying against student loan reform, including lobbying the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, which made recommendations on the cost savings of the governments switch to direct lending. Over the last three campaign cycles (2012, 2010 and 2008) Sallie Maes PAC has spent $1,583,557, favoring Democrats in 08 and 10 but so far this year favoring the GOP.

In 2010, when Citigroup decided to get out of the student loan business, Sallie Mae paid $1.2 billion for the rights to collect payments and service $28 billion in federally backed loans.

2. Wells Fargo

Wachovia and Wells Fargo were the third- and fourth-largest originators of federally subsidized private loans under FFELP in 2009, with $5.54 billion and $5.14 billion, respectively. After their merger, the resultant behemoth is the countrys second-largest private student lender.

As we reported recently at AlterNet, Wells Fargo reported profits of $12.36 billion in 2010, and is No. 23 on the Fortune 500, just above Procter amp; Gamble. Headquartered in California, the bank has $1.26 trillion in assets and $93 billion in revenues. And, of course, it got $25 billion in TARP funds from the government and borrowed another $300 billion through the Federal Reserve during the financial crisis, which it helped create — Wells Fargo is the countrys largest consumer lender and is the only one of the nations big banks that offers payday advance loans, which it calls “Direct Deposit Advance” and has direct financial connections to six of the top seven payday lenders.

The company has faced allegations of racial bias in its mortgage lending processes, though theres no information about similar allegations of its student lending. Salon reported:

“Wells Fargo has a history of targeting vulnerable communities for risky financial products. At the height of the subprime lending mania in 2006, the bank was more likely to loan subprime mortgages to Latinos and African-Americans than whites, according to a September 2009 report by the Center for American Progress, a process known as “reverse red-lining.” For financially stable borrowers, the targeting was even starker: Middle-class blacks were four times more likely than middle-class whites to get a dangerous mortgage. Middle-class Latinos were nearly three times more likely.”

Wells Fargo is now offering a new fixed-rate private student loan, which would allow borrowers to lock in one rate for the life of their loan; however, the rates can be high — up to 14 percent for those attending community colleges or trade schools, or in other words, for lower-income borrowers.

In Minnesota recently, a group of Occupy-affiliated activists “mic-checked” Wells Fargo CEO John Stumpf, calling him out for his banks foreclosure and student debt policies.

3. Discover

After buying the remains of Citis Student Loan Corp., Discover Financial Services became the third-largest provider of private student loans. Best known for the Discover Card, of course, the companys website proclaims:

“The company operates the Discover card, Americas cash rewards pioneer, and offers personal and student loans, online savings products, certificates of deposit and money market accounts through its Discover Bank subsidiary.”

According to Canadian Business magazine, of Discovers $52.51 billion in total loans (as of May 31, 2011) $4.57 billion was student loans, up from $820 million the previous year — which reflects the buyout of Citis loans.

Harit Talwar, the companys vice president for US Cards, said of student lending at a conference in May, We really like this business. In the US, as you know, education costs are increasing much faster than income. And therefore, students need funding for tuition fees.

Discovers PAC has spent $2,221,136 over the last three election cycles on candidates, mostly to Republicans.

4. NelNet

Based in Lincoln, Neb., NelNet was founded in 1978 as the UNIPAC Loan Service Corp. and renamed NelNet in 1996. It reported net income of $165.5 million for three quarters of 2011, and has net student loan assets of $24.6 billion. Its press release states:

“In September 2009, Nelnet began servicing student loans for the Department of Education (Department) under a contract that will increase the companys fee-based revenue as the servicing volume increases. At September 30, 2011, the company was servicing $44.6 billion of loans for 3 million borrowers on behalf of the Department, compared with $21.8 billion of loans for 2.5 million borrowers on September 30, 2010. Revenue from this contract increased to $12.8 million for the third quarter of 2011, up from $8.7 million for the same period a year ago.”

Thats $12.8 million in a quarter for servicing federal loans.

The lender has been riddled with controversy; in 2006, Inside Higher Ed reported that NelNet had overcharged the government about a billion dollars. (They settled in 2010 for $55 million to resolve a whistle-blower lawsuit — which also targeted Sallie Mae.) And Higher Ed Watch reported in 2007, in a piece called “NelNets Friend with Benefits”:

“Amidst revelations this spring of industry wide kickbacks, improper inducements, and gifts from student loan providers to colleges and universities, Nelnet quickly shut down a Nebraska investigation into its activities by agreeing to provide $1 million to the state in support of a national financial aid awareness campaign.

….

As we reported two weeks ago, seeking higher office in Nebraska with Nelnets support can be a lucrative endeavor. Democratic Sen. Ben Nelson received almost $65,000 in the 2005-2006 election cycle alone from Nelnet and Union Bank executives and officials. This June, Nelson co-sponsored an amendment that would have sent $4 billion in financial aid earmarked for students instead to for-profit student loan companies like Nelnet. Nelsons amendment lost 61-36.”

NelNets PAC has spent $398,731 on campaign donations since 2008, and its spent $2,780,000 on lobbying since 2007; its lobbyists have included Clark Lytle Gelduldig amp; Cranford, the firm recently outed by Chris Hayes on MSNBC as doing opposition research on the Occupy Wall Street movement.

JPMorgan Chase

JPMorgan this year became the countrys largest bank by asset size, surpassing the troubled Bank of America, and its private student loan division came into shape when it purchased Collegiate Funding Services in 2006, creating Chase Student Loans.

In 2009, Chase held $11.1 billion in FFELP loans, not a huge amount when you consider its $2.29 trillion in current assets. Still, the giant has been accused of some shady lending practices.

Back in 2007, NPR reported:

“The House Education and Labor Committee says it has evidence that JPMorgan Chase paid five student aid officials to do work for the bank while they were still on their schools payroll. JPMorgan Chase confirmed it did pay school officials to do work related to student loans, but the bank says it doesnt do that kind of thing anymore.

The company says it has also stopped throwing lavish parties for university officials, like the $70,000 cruise in New York Harbor that student aid officers enjoyed in 2005.”

JPMorgan Chase spends lavishly on campaigns and lobbying as well, dropping $5.8 million in just the last year on lobbyists and having given $109,750 to Mitt Romney, $79,150 to Virginia Sen. Mark Warner, $55,750 to Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker, and $37,439 to Barack Obama.

And just recently, the bank was pushed to reinstate a deferment program for active duty military servicepeople, after NBC News reported on a family that “received a letter alerting them the bank decided to end the program and would no longer allow active-duty troops to delay paying their student loans, even if they were away at war.”

Student Loan Solver Launches New Website to Help Students Get Loans

Wednesday, November 30th, 2011

Student Loan Solver, a leading reference on obtaining student loans with poor or bad credit introduces its new website Student Loan Solver. Find information on student loans, how to obtain them, what kind of credit students might need, how to apply with bad credit, and when a cosigner may be needed. This website gives the ability to search for information that might be difficult to find in other places with links to all student loan forms.

It is almost impossible these days to get a job in this economy. Without a college degree the chances of being well-employed are fairly low. Competition for jobs is fierce, and where it used to be that they might only need a high school degree, they may now need a college degree to get jobs that actually only would require a high school degree. As time moves on, workers will need to keep furthering their education in order to stay competitive. That means not just a bachelor’s degree, but a master’s degree and beyond. However, the problem comes when it is time to pay for college. College runs into the tens of thousands of dollars per year. It is almost impossible to get through college without some type of student loan.

The typical student looking for a student loan is under the age of 20 and probably has little to no credit. In this case it is hard to get student loans without a cosigner. A cosigner is almost always necessary. A cosigner acts as a guarantee that the loan will be paid. However, if the only hope is someone with bad credit or if there is no potential cosigner, it is possible to get student loans without a cosigner.

If the prospective student is on their own, or an older adult, they can still get student loans with bad credit or if with little to no credit history. There are agencies that specialize in student loans with bad credit. They may have to pay a higher interest rate in the end, but they can still find a loan to meet their college needs.

Student Loan Solver is here to help all perspective students find that loan. Discover what types of loans are available, where to get them, and the best way to apply. In a world where competition is fierce, everyone needs a good education. Don’t think that just because they may have poor, or even no credit, that school is out of reach for them. Visit Student Loan Solver and find solutions to student loan problems.

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Debt Ceiling Plans Take Aim At Graduate Student Loans

Tuesday, August 2nd, 2011

The competing deficit reduction/debt ceiling increase plans proposed by House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) would both cut off subsidized Stafford student loans for graduate and professional students.

Currently, graduate and professional students can take out up to $20,500 a year in federal  loans, and up to $8,500 of this amount can be in subsidized loans if they’re found to have financial need.  (Details here, at the government’s student aid web site.)  With the subsidized variety of loans, Uncle Sam pays the interest due while students are in school and during a six month “grace period” after they’ve left school and before repayment begins.  With the unsubsidized variety,  interest accrues while students study and during the grace period, adding to the amount they must pay back when they graduate.

Under both the Boehner and Reid plans, no new subsidized loans would be issued to graduate students after July 1, 2012.  The savings would be used to help fund the Pell Grant program, which provides lower income undergraduates with grants of up to $5,500 a year. (More explanation of  how the Pell program would be funded is at the Ed Money Watch blog here.)

According  to a Congressional Budget Office analysis of Boehner’s plans, over  a 10 year period, $125 billion worth of graduate student loans would be shifted from the subsidized program to the unsubsidized one.  Boehners plan would also eliminate a partial origination fee rebate that is offered as an incentive to student loan borrowers (including undergraduate borrowers) who repay their loans on time.

The proposed graduate funding cutback comes even as a study released this week by the  Department of Education shows that the number of graduate and professional students, the cost of graduate school and students’  reliance on loans have all been growing. The  Chronicle of Higher Education reports that the study found that  80 percent of law students and 82 percent of medical and other health-sciences graduate students took out loans in the 2007-2008 school year.

Obamas Student Loans Paid Off, Will Yours?

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Citizens Bank offering fixed rate student loans

Monday, August 1st, 2011

MANCHESTER Citizens Bank announced that its TruFit Student Loan product is now available with a new fixed rate, giving students peace of mind in knowing how much their monthly payments will be when they start to repay their loan.

There are no origination fees associated with the loan and interest rates are as low as 6.75 percent APR. Although students have the ability to qualify solely, they are encouraged to apply with a qualified cosigner to increase their chances of receiving the lowest interest rate possible.

We know from our customers that many families budgeting for college today are interested in a fixed rate option that gives them more control over their finances in the face of an uncertain economy and rising tuition costs, said Joe Carelli, President, Citizens Bank, New Hampshire and Vermont. This product offers competitive rates while giving students a dependable source of funding after grants, scholarships and federal loans have been exhausted. We hope this new option will make it even easier for students to achieve the goal of attending the school of their choice.

The TruFit Student Loan is available to eligible students who are enrolled at least half-time in a four-year undergraduate or graduate program. Students can apply online at www.citizensbank.com/trufitstudentloan or call (800) 708-6684.

Debate Over Regulating Student Loans at For-Profit Colleges Continues

Saturday, July 30th, 2011

Debate Over Regulating Student Loans at For-Profit Colleges Continues

Posted by Shannon Rasberry on Jul 26, 2011 in Student Loan Legislation | 0 comments

The debate over rules that regulate student loans at for-profit colleges continued in Washington this week after the final version of a series of rules released June1 was criticized as too harsh by Republicans and for-profit schools and too weak by Democrats and student advocacy groups.

Weeks after the US Department of Education released the softened final version of the gainful employment rule, meant to ensure that graduates of for-profit colleges are able to find adequate employment to repay student loans, House Republicans announced that they would continue to oppose the rule, saying that, in their view, it had not been softened nearly enough. Days later, the industry’s largest lobbying group sued the Education Department to prevent the gainful employment rule from going into effect.

On Friday, Democrats went back on the offensive. Sen. Tom Harkin of Iowa, a vociferous critic of for-profit colleges, held a roundtable discussion with both critics and leaders of for-profit colleges that indicated he would pursue additional legislative regulation of the industry. Harkin first launched his campaign against the for-profit college industry after an undercover probe by the Government Accountability Office last summer found widespread deception and fraud by recruiters, admissions personnel, and financial aid officers at all of the for-profit schools targeted by the investigation.

The discussion looked at four main issues, including how to determine what should constitute success for a for-profit school, the extent of information about a school and its programs that prospective students should receive before enrolling, whether the colleges should be held to tougher standards, and alternative ways to provide incentives for better performance.

Industry Critics: Student Loans are Abused at For-Profit Colleges

Harkin repeated his frequent assertion that the for-profit college sector consists of “good actors” that benefit students and “bad actors” that produce students with substantial debt from student loans who are unable to use their certificates or degrees, which industry critics have referred to as largely worthless, to find employment that will allow the students to repay their loans.

Critics who attended the roundtable noted that the final version of the gainful employment rule, which would have placed 55percent of for-profit colleges’ program under increased scrutiny, was softened significantly from its initial position, which makes additional oversight needed.

The way that US military veterans fit into the so-called 90/10rule was a major focus of the roundtable. The 90/10rule stipulates that for-profit colleges are allowed to get a maximum of 90percent of their revenue from TitleIV federal financial aid, which includes federal grants and federal student loans, while the other 10percent must come from non-federal sources, including cash payments and private student loans.

For-profit colleges take advantage of veterans because their education benefits fall into the latter 10percent, meaning that for every veteran a college enrolls, nine other students can be enrolled who rely on federal financial aid, said Holly Petraeus, a leader in the Office of Servicemember Affairs for the Treasury Department team establishing the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

“For every one GI Bill or tuition assistance recipient you recruit, you can get nine other students in your Title IV category,” Petraeus said. “I think military folks are seen at this point like a dollar sign wearing a uniform in the for-profit model. They’re seen as cash” (“For-Profit Debate Redux,” Inside Higher Ed, July22, 2011).

Industry Leaders: Regulations are Too Complicated and Burdensome

The two for-profit college representatives at the roundtable, Daniel Hamburger, the president and CEO of DeVry, Inc., and Hayes Batson, the president and CEO of the Regency Beauty Institute, a chain of cosmetology schools based in Minnesota, pushed back against critics’ assertions.

Baston said that Regency Beauty Institute’s 90-10 ratio was 80-20, including many self-financing students, and Hamburger said that DeVry had been serving veterans for years. Both agreed that a reevaluation of the 90/10 rule may be in order.

Baston added that, overall, regulation of the for-profit sector needs to be less complicated and less burdensome. For example, Baston said, between the agency that accredits Regency Beauty Institute and the federal government, the completion rate of its students, an area of regulation in the new rules passed last month, is measured in seven different ways. “I find it difficult from day to day to tell you what our completion rate is,” Batson said. “I guarantee you from a consumer’s perspective, it’s impossible.”

Harkin acknowledged that further regulation would almost certainly be opposed by Republicans and industry lobbyists, but he indicated that he would continue pressing. “It almost seems to me that there are some in the sector, not all, that quite frankly don’t want to change anything, that are quite happy with the way it is right now,” Harkin said. “They’re making great profits and they’re not being held accountable.”

How A Nonprofit Funded 1000 Students With Micro-loans [EXCLUSIVE]

Saturday, July 30th, 2011

A Seattle-based non-profit has helped 1,000 students in developing countries get a proper education thanks entirely to its micro-loan platform and donations from the public.

Vittana was founded in 2009 with the aim of helping students in developing countries pay for their education through student loans. Two years later it has funded 1,000 students in 10 developing countries.

While that may not seem like a lot, its a major milestone when you consider those micro-loans are being paid by micro-donations from around the world. The platforms high return rate doesnt negate the amount of blind trust and goodwill necessary to make Vittana run. So far its been paying off for students like Bernarda Esmilsen Escobar, a young woman studying nursing in Paraguay and Vitannas 1,000th student.

Escobar didnt have enough money to finish school and requested a $900 micro-loan. When she graduates shell earn more than $20 per day, up from $9 per day, to support herself and her son. That improvement is typical, according to Vittana, which claims its students earn nearly three times their original income after graduation.

Student loans can amount to thousands of dollars in the US In developing countries, student loans are much less expensive, but there are also fewer options for help. Vittana acts as a way to provide those people with the loans needed to finish their education. Users can pledge as little as $25 to be repaid by the student over time. Although repayment isnt guaranteed, the non-profit claims a 99% return rate. Users can then reinvest that money, donate it to Vittana or withdraw it as cash.

What do you think of micro-loans? Is it smart to crowdsource education funding? Sound off in the comments.

7 Simple Ways to Pay Off Any Size Student Loan

Friday, July 29th, 2011

While it would be nice to start off your professional career with a clean slate of zero debt, student loans are a necessary evil for many young professionals these days.

In fact, the Project on Student Debt recently released a report stating that the average college graduate is now saddled with around $24,000 in student loan debt.

An Introduction To Student Loans And The FAFSA

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

In the United States the federal government acts as a central point in accessing financial aid for education. Therefore, for any type of financial aid (loans, grants, work-study or even parental loans) you must fill out a Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), which you can do online right here.

You must also fill out an FAFSA form if you wish to apply for most state and school funded programs including college loans, state-funded grants and tuition assistance initiatives. The US Department of Education has established guidelines that are used to determine your eligibility for financial aid. There are many factors that they consider, including (but not limited to):

  • Your income
  • Your parents income
  • Your net assets
  • The number of siblings in your household
  • Your family expenses
  • The number of siblings attending college at the same time

Even if you think you wont qualify it is important to fill out an FAFSA form. You may be surprised and you wouldnt want to miss an opportunity to access cheap funding options. There are even some forms of federal funding aid that are not dependent upon financial need, such as unsubsidized Stafford loans and PLUS loans.

Submit your FAFSA form as early in the New Year as possible as many awards are granted on a first come, first served basis. Your filing date also determines your place in the queue for school, state and federal programs. Remember that you must submit a new form for each year that you are applying for aid.

What You Need to Fill Out the FAFSA
It is a good idea to fill out the form online; however, if you dont have access, you can use a paper copy and snail mail. With the online form you will receive your Student Aid Report (SAR) quickly and you will also be able to check to make sure the form is filled out completely before submitting. This is a good idea as you dont want to be rejected because of a missed question. You can also download a worksheet to help you with the application process.

You will need the following information to complete the worksheet and the actual application itself:

  • Your drivers license
  • Your Social Security Number
  • Your Income Tax return (Form 1040)
  • Your W-2 forms and any other record of income earned. This includes Social Security, child support, welfare, pensions, veterans benefits, etc.
  • Your parents Income Tax return (if you are a dependent)
  • Your bank and mortgage statements
  • Your record of investments (stocks, bonds, mutual funds, certificates of deposit, etc)
  • Your citizenship status (if not a US citizen)

Since not everyone has their taxation information completed in January you can estimate these numbers on your FAFSA form. Remember to go back and correct the information later once your taxes are complete.

It usually only takes one to three days to get your PIN for the application, which will be supplied online, or seven to 10 days via snail mail. With a PIN, the process to submit the FAFSA for one or more schools is very quick, usually just a few days. Be sure to list the schools that you are applying to with the nearest deadline first.

Upon processing you will receive your SAR which you need to make corrections or changes to your FAFSA. This SAR will also be available to your chosen schools and processing there can take much longer (two to six weeks typically). Call your schools financial aid department for confirmation. Any funding that you are approved for is usually not available until the first week of the semester in which you are enrolled.

Tips and Hints for Filling Out the FAFSA Form

Letter | Budget cuts would hurt college students needing loans

Thursday, July 28th, 2011

lt;stronggt;lt;span class=subheadgt;Give students a break on loanslt;/spangt;lt;/stronggt;lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;In recent debt ceiling negotiations, Republicans proposed making college students pay more interest on student loans as a way to save the government money. lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Specifically, they said students should start paying interest right away rather than being able to defer payments until after graduation.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Iamp;#x2019;ll be entering college this fall, and a student loan is the only way I can afford it. I know we have a deficit problem, and I understand painful decisions will have to be made to correct it, but I donamp;#x2019;t think placing an increased burden on young people who want to go to college is the way to do it. Congress should be making it easier to afford college, not harder.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Frankly, Iamp;#x2019;m having a hard time wrapping my head around the Republican logic in these negotiations. Apparently, for them, letting millionairesamp;#x2019; tax cuts expire is off the table, but making college students pay more is just fine.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Asking seniors, the middle class and the poor to sacrifice via cuts to Medicare, Social Security and Medicaid is acceptable, but asking our most fortunate citizens to pay any more is out of the question. Itamp;#x2019;s pretty clear whose side theyamp;#x2019;re on.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;lt;p align=rightgt;lt;stronggt;Matt Hamblinlt;/stronggt;lt;/pgt;lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;lt;p align=rightgt;lt;emgt;Overland Parklt;/emgt;lt;/pgt;