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Student loans from our partners
on College Ave website
5.0
2.84-17.99%
Mid-600s
on Sallie Mae website
4.5
2.89-17.49%
Mid-600's
on SoFi® website
5.0
3.43-15.99%
Mid-600s
on Ascent website
5.0
13.01-15.19%
Low-Mid 600s
on Ascent website
5.0
13.01-15.19%
Low-Mid 600s
on SoFi® website
4.0
4.24-9.99%
650
on Earnest website
4.5
4.15-9.99%
665
on College Ave website
4.5
6.99-13.99%
Mid-600s
on College Ave website
5.0
2.84-17.99%
Mid-600s
on Sallie Mae website
4.5
2.89-17.49%
Mid-600's
on SoFi® website
5.0
3.43-15.99%
Mid-600s
on College Ave website
5.0
2.84-15.99%
Mid-600s
on Sallie Mae website
4.5
2.89-14.99%
Mid-600's
on Ascent website
5.0
3.49-15.46%
Low-Mid 600s
on College Ave website
5.0
2.84-17.99%
Mid-600s
on Ascent website
4.0
5.15-15.41%
660
on Earnest website
4.5
2.89-14.90%
650
3 ways to prioritize student loan payments
Pay off high-interest loans first
- Say your $10,000 loan has a low 4.53% interest. If you pay it off in five years — rather than the standard 10-year repayment timeline — you will save about $1,259 in interest.
- Say your other $10,000 loan has a 7% interest rate. If you prioritize that loan over the 4.53% loan and pay it off in five years rather than 10 years, you will save more: $2,052.
Pay off small loans first
Combine strategies
Pay attention to the big picture
- Saved at least a month of expenses for emergencies.
- Started saving automatically for retirement, either by getting the company match on a 401(k) or putting money in a Roth IRA.
- Made a plan to pay off credit card balances, which often have the highest interest rates of all.
- Making biweekly loan payments will shrink your repayment term.
- Refinancing private student loans can often lower your interest rate and has no fees.












