Student Financial Aid
Parents of dependent students can take out loans to supplement their children’s aid packages. The federal Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students (PLUS) lets parents borrow money to cover any costs not already covered by the student’s financial aid package, up to the full cost of attendance. There is no cumulative limit. Like the Stafford Loan, PLUS loans are either FFELP (provided by private lenders, such as banks) or Direct (funds provided by the government).
Starting on July 1, 2006, graduate and professional students will also be able to borrow money through the PLUS Loan program to pay for their own education.
These days the PLUS loan is referred to as either the Parent PLUS or the Grad PLUS loan. The original name, Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students, is no longer used, not even in the Higher Education Act.
PLUS Loans have a fixed interest rate of 8.5% for loans with a first disbursement after July 1, 2006. (Previously, PLUS loans had variable interest rates (based on 52 week T-bill rate + 3.10%) capped at 9 %.) The interest is not subsidized while the student is in school, unlike the subsidized
Repayment begins 60 days after the funds are fully disbursed, and the repayment term is up to 10 years. There is no grace period as there is with the Stafford Loan program. Some lenders allow parents to defer payment on the PLUS Loan while the student is enrolled in school by capitalizing the interest. Interest is capitalized no more frequently than quarterly. Payments can also be deferred if the parents are themselves enrolled in college. They will need to submit an application for an in-school deferment.
PLUS loans can be consolidated just like Stafford and Perkins Loans, although a parent’s PLUS loan cannot be consolidated with the student’s
Consolidating PLUS loans for your students financial aid provide access to alternate repayment terms, such as extended repayment, graduated repayment, and income contingent repayment.
It is important to know that since the consolidation loan has an interest rate that is capped at 8.25%, consolidating your PLUS loans can reduce the interest rate by 0.25%. It is best to consolidate PLUS loans separately from
PLUS loans are the financial responsibility of the parents, not the student. If the student agrees to make payments on the PLUS loan, but fails to make the payments on time, the parents will be held responsible.
Parents who are considering a PLUS loan for there student’s financial aid do also often consider a home equity loan or an alternative loan. There are several tradeoffs between these options.