Do this by April 30 if you want student loan forgiveness this year – Daily News

By Eliza Haverstock | NerdWallet

The Education Department has forgiven more than $45 billion of student loans for 930,500 longtime borrowers through the one-time income-driven repayment (IDR) account adjustment. If you’ve been repaying your student loans for at least a decade, you could be next in line — but you may need to consolidate before the April 30 deadline.

These types of loans require immediate consolidation to qualify for the maximum benefits of the IDR account adjustment:

  • Commercially held FFELP loans.
  • Commercially held Perkins loans.
  • HEAL loans.
  • Parent PLUS loans in repayment for less than 25 years (or less than 10 years, if eligible for Public Service Loan Forgiveness).
  • Direct loans with different past payment counts.

If your loans aren’t on this list, you likely don’t need to take action to benefit from the IDR account adjustment.

“For those folks who are really focused on achieving forgiveness of some type, try to be as proactive as you can,” says Stacey MacPhetres, senior director of education finance for EdAssist by Bright Horizons, a workplace education benefits provider.

Here’s how to stay ahead of the curve.

Complete the consolidation application

“Consolidating your student loans means basically you take a bunch of individual loans and you turn them into a brand new single loan,” explains Jill Desjean, senior policy analyst at the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators. This new loan is called a “Direct Consolidation Loan.” There’s no application fee to consolidate.

Confirm which types of loans you have before attempting to consolidate. Log in to your StudentAid.gov account, and select “loan breakdown” from your dashboard to see what your loans are called. “Direct,” “FFEL,” “Perkins” or “HEAL” may be in the name. If your servicer starts with “Dept. of Ed” or “Default Management Collection System,” your loan is held by the government, not a commercial lender. If your servicer starts with a company or school name, you must consolidate your loans to get credit for IDR forgiveness.

To access the application, go to StudentAid.gov/loan-consolidation. The online form will automatically populate most borrowers’ contact and loan information. Confirm accuracy. Next, you’ll be prompted to:

  • Select which federal loans you want to consolidate.
  • Preview the amount of your new direct consolidation loan and its interest rate.
  • Choose a repayment plan, even if you’ll be eligible for forgiveness. If you aren’t eligible for forgiveness now, you’ll want to sign up for an IDR plan going forward to keep earning credit toward forgiveness. The form will direct you to the IDR application, which requires you to input or recertify your income information.
  • Choose a federal student loan servicer for your consolidation loan.
  • Provide contact information for two references who can be contacted if the Education Department is unable to reach you.

The entire process can take less than 30 minutes and be completed in one sitting, says the Federal Student Aid Office. For assistance or to apply for consolidation over the phone, contact the Federal Student Aid Information Center at 800-433-3243.

Generally, you can’t consolidate an existing consolidation loan unless you’re applying to PSLF or adding another loan to the mix, like a Perkins loan that you didn’t previously consolidate.

Don’t miss the deadline

You must submit a consolidation application by April 30 to get the maximum benefit. Don’t put this off — though this consolidation deadline has been moved in the past, another deadline change is unlikely, experts say.

After application submission, the Education Department says most consolidation loans are disbursed within 60 days.

“Once you submit that application, there’s a whole behind-the-scenes process happening with the [Education] Department and any lenders, where they’re kind of making payments to one another,” Desjean explains. “Basically … the Department is buying your loans from whatever bank is holding them.”

In the past, consolidation could reset your payment counts to zero for IDR and PSLF forgiveness. That’s no longer always the case.

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