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Grad School Debt Holding You Back? How to Get It Under Control
Think long-term to pay off your grad school debt — or get it forgiven.
Eliza Haverstock is a former lead writer on NerdWallet's student loans team, where she focuses on loan repayment and alternatives to traditional four-year degrees. Previously, she reported on billionaires, markets, personal finance and fintech fraud for Forbes Magazine in New York, and she also covered private equity and venture capital for PitchBook in Seattle. She got started at her college newspaper at the University of Virginia and interned for Bloomberg, where she spent a summer writing a feature story about plastic straws. She is based in Washington, D.C.
where she worked on its rankings and on the Education
Health and Money teams. Before that
she interned at Vice Magazine.
Laura McMullen assigns and edits financial news content. She was previously a senior writer at NerdWallet and covered saving, making and budgeting money; she also contributed to the "Millennial Money" column for The Associated Press. Before joining NerdWallet in 2015, Laura worked for U.S. News & World Report, where she wrote and edited content related to careers, wellness and education and also contributed to the company's rankings projects. Before working at U.S. News, Laura interned at Vice Media and studied journalism, history and Arabic at Ohio University. Laura lives in Washington, D.C. Email: <a href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a>. Twitter: <a href="https://twitter.com/lauraemcmullen">@lauraemcmullen</a>.
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Graduate school can boost your career prospects and earnings — but it can come at a steep price. Nearly half of grad students take out loans, with an average balance of $77,300, according to a 2023 report from the National Center for Education Statistics.
That debt can be tough to manage — it adds up fast. All grad school loans, whether federal or private, accrue interest while you're in school, says Brittany Brinckerhoff, a Chapel Hill, North Carolina-based certified financial planner and certified student loan professional.
You also have fewer repayment options than you do with federal undergrad loans, says Brinckerhoff, who’s worked with attorneys and medical professionals repaying hundreds of thousands of dollars in grad school debt.
If graduate school loans are holding you back from achieving your financial goals, consider these expert-approved strategies.
Understand your debt — and your full financial picture
The first step is understanding your debt. Your loan type can determine what repayment plans are available, says Glenn Sanger-Hodgson, a Tallahassee, Florida-based accredited financial planner and certified student loan professional who specializes in medical school debt.
Log into your StudentAid.gov account for federal loan details, including balance, loan type, interest rate and repayment plans. The Education Department’s loan simulator can help you understand federal repayment options. For private loans, check your loan documents or contact your lender.
Once you understand your debt and repayment options, it’s time to choose a path forward. Use the rules of thumb below as a starting point. But also run the numbers on all available repayment plans to find the one that best fits your financial goals and career plans, Sanger-Hodgson says.
If your debt is double your income, consider forgiveness
Forgiveness is usually time-based. For example, you can get forgiveness after 10 years of payments while working a public service job, or after 20 to 25 years of payments on an IDR plan.
So if you aim for forgiveness, choose the repayment plan with the smallest monthly payment. That way you maximize the amount of debt forgiven when you reach the finish line.
For most borrowers, that means signing up for an IDR plan. The IDR plan called Income-Based Repayment (IBR) is the only IDR plan that's not going away in 2028 as a result of the recent budget reconciliation bill.
“Your goal needs to be paying as little as possible over the life of the loan,” Sanger-Hodgson says. If you put extra money toward your debt while on a forgiveness path, “you're just throwing money away that would have been forgiven otherwise.”
If your debt is equal to or less than your income, aggressively pay it off
If your student debt is roughly equal to or less than your income, you’re less likely to benefit from a forgiveness program. With an IDR plan, you could end up paying off your debt in full before achieving forgiveness.
Instead, assuming you’re on track for other financial goals, try “aggressively throwing every financial resource [you] have at getting those student loans paid off as quickly as possible,” Sanger-Hodgson says.
Make additional lump-sum payments. If you have federal student loans, call your servicer and ask if you can apply extra payments toward the principal, rather than interest. And if you have multiple student loans, tackle the ones with a higher interest rate first.
Refinance, if you qualify for a lower interest rate.
Carefully consider the decision to refinance if you have federal student loans. They will be replaced with private loans, and you’ll permanently exit the federal student loan system. That means forfeiting access to income-driven repayment plans, forgiveness and other relief.
If you refinance, “you've got to be 110% certain that you're gonna be paying off your loans in full and that you're not going to need forgiveness at any point,” Sanger-Hodgson says.
Stay informed about your student loans
Government policies, including the recent budget reconciliation bill, are poised to reshape student loans repayment and forgiveness options. Keep an eye on the news and official Education Department announcements.
“There are tremendous changes on the horizon for student loans,” Sanger-Hodgson says.
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