Money Matters
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How do/did you deal with accruing interest for student loans? I just checked my balance, and I already have over $67 in interest. It was $48 on Monday.
My interest rates are 6.21% and 7.21% through federal loans...I paid it now but money is tight being in my second year of law school and working 2 pt jobs and being in school FT.
This is more of an "I'm overwhelmed and in my second law school plus I just want to be debt free" rant than anything but how did you cope? I'm planning on paying interest as I can so that it stays as low as possible but I just don't know how no one else appears to be worried about student loans at school! Obviously my loans are my business and everyone else's are theirs but it is so stressful!
Does anyone have any advice for staying calm and frugal while in school with amounting loans? FYI -My SL debt currently is about $56,000. I received a loan from family for my first year for about $28,000 and currently owe the government $28,000. I was lucky and received my undergraduate education 100% paid for by my parents. I'm working 2 part time jobs, about 15-20 hrs per week.
Thanks everyone!
Re: Student Loans!
I would save up every penny you can toward next semester's tuition and borrow less rather than throw what you can toward the interest.
Less Principal=Less Interest and you can still throw money toward your interest during your grace period if you have it and want/need to before it capitalizes.
If you want to go into something less lucrative than big law (I did) this calculus might change. But you might also have a shot at loan forgiveness through your school, so look into that. I took out loans for all 3 years, kept $50k in an index fund and paid a big chunk of them off immediately after graduation. I was still in the era of subsidized loans, but even so I got way more than 6.55% interest on that money while I was in school. I also got around 2k from my school as loan forgiveness before I paid them off.
I just doubt that whatever you're earning with your pt jobs is making up for lost earning power after graduation, especially since you can prepay SL with no penalty so you can really cut down your effective interest rate by living frugally after school and throwing extra payments at them. If you're at a school (general "you" here) where even the top students aren't finding lucrative jobs, then by all means, focus on minimizing debt, but otherwise that seems like a short-sighted trade-off.