Your Payments
Repayment of most subsidized and unsubsidized Direct Loans begins
six months after you have graduated, or are no longer enrolled in school at
least half time. The period between those events and repaying your loan is
a six-month grace period.
Borrowers of Parent PLUS and Grad PLUS loans
may request deferment of repayment while either the borrower or the student
for whom the loan was borrowed is enrolled at least half time and for six
months thereafter.
Your loan servicer will contact you before your
first loan payment is due. In addition, you will be provided with a choice
of repayment plans, including: standard, graduated, extended, income-based
repayment (IBR), pay-as-you-earn (PAYE), revised pay as you earn (REPAYE),
income-contingent repayment (ICR) and an income-sensitive repayment plan.
- Standard
- Graduated
- Extended
- Income-based repayment (IBR)
- Pay-as-you-earn (PAYE)
- Revised pay-as-you-earn (REPAYE)
- Income-contingent repayment (ICR)
- Income-sensitive repayment
If you do not notify your loan servicer of your selected
repayment plan, or do not provide the required documentation, your loan will
be set up on a standard repayment schedule.
It is very important that
you keep the loan servicer of your loan informed of your current address and
contact information so that you will receive the repayment information.
The repayment schedule will reflect the total balance of your loan, your interest
rate, the amount and due dates of your monthly payments based either on a
standard repayment plan or the repayment plan you selected, and the address
to which you must send your payments. Carefully review all the information
on your repayment schedule to make sure that it is correct. If the information
is not accurate, or you do not receive this document, contact your loan servicer.
You can learn about your federal student loan, including the total
amount of your loans, through StudentAid.gov.
It is in your best interest to
pay your student loans in a timely manner.