Student Loans and College Finance
The United States has over $1.7 trillion in outstanding student loan debt — making it the second-largest category of consumer debt after mortgages. Understanding how student loans work, how to minimise debt, and how repayment options work can save borrowers tens of thousands of dollars.
The Cost of College
Average annual costs at US institutions (2023–2024):
| Institution Type | Tuition + Fees | Room & Board | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Public 4-year (in-state) | $11,260 | $13,390 | ~$24,650 |
| Public 4-year (out-of-state) | $29,150 | $13,390 | ~$42,540 |
| Private nonprofit 4-year | $41,540 | $15,200 | ~$56,740 |
| Community college (2-year) | $3,990 | N/A (usually commute) | ~$3,990 |
Sticker price ≠ what most students pay. Financial aid (grants, scholarships, loans, work-study) reduces the actual cost significantly.
The FAFSA
The Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) is the form you must complete to be considered for federal aid — grants, work-study, and loans. It also opens the door to most institutional and state aid.
Key facts:
- Available at studentaid.gov
- Open October 1 for the following academic year — apply early (some aid is first-come, first-served)
- Based on prior-prior year tax returns (2024–25 FAFSA uses 2022 tax return)
- Determines your Student Aid Index (SAI) — what the government expects your family can contribute
- Must be renewed every year
Expected Family Contribution → SAI: The FAFSA formula considers income, assets, family size, and number of college students in the family. Schools subtract your SAI from their cost of attendance to determine your financial need, then offer a mix of aid to fill (or partially fill) that gap.
Types of Aid
| Aid Type | Source | Need to Repay? |
|---|---|---|
| Pell Grant | Federal; up to $7,395/year (2024–25) | No — free money for low-income undergraduates |
| Institutional grants/scholarships | College | No — merit or need-based |
| Federal Work-Study | Federal; part-time campus jobs | No (you earn it by working) |
| Federal subsidised loans | Federal; interest doesn't accrue while in school | Yes |
| Federal unsubsidised loans | Federal; interest accrues immediately | Yes |
| Federal PLUS loans | Federal; for parents (Parent PLUS) or grad students | Yes |
| Private student loans | Banks, credit unions | Yes — often less favourable terms |
Maximise grants and scholarships first. Only borrow what you absolutely need.
Federal vs. Private Student Loans
| Feature | Federal Loans | Private Loans |
|---|---|---|
| Interest rates | Fixed, set annually by Congress | Fixed or variable; credit-based |
| Credit check | No (subsidised/unsubsidised) | Yes — cosigner often required |
| Income-driven repayment | Yes | Rarely |
| Public Service Loan Forgiveness | Yes | No |
| Deferment/forbearance | Broad options | Limited |
| Forgiveness programs | Multiple | None |
| Refinancing | Can refinance, but lose federal benefits | Refinancing available |
Almost always borrow federal before private. Federal loans have stronger protections, repayment flexibility, and access to forgiveness programs.
Federal Loan Types and Limits
Subsidised Loans (Undergraduate Only)
- Based on financial need
- The government pays the interest while you're enrolled at least half-time, during grace period, and during deferment
- 2024–25 rate: 6.53%
Unsubsidised Loans (Undergrad and Grad)
- Available regardless of need
- Interest accrues immediately — even while you're in school
- 2024–25 rate: 6.53% (undergrad) / 8.08% (grad)
- Avoid letting interest capitalise: Pay at least the interest while in school to prevent your balance from growing
Annual Loan Limits (Dependent Undergraduates)
| Year | Subsidised Max | Total Max (Sub + Unsub) |
|---|---|---|
| Freshman | $3,500 | $5,500 |
| Sophomore | $4,500 | $6,500 |
| Junior/Senior | $5,500 | $7,500 |
| Undergraduate total | $23,000 | $31,000 |
Repayment Plans
Standard Repayment
- Fixed payments over 10 years
- Highest monthly payment but least total interest paid
- Best for borrowers who can afford payments and want to be done quickly
Income-Driven Repayment (IDR)
Monthly payments capped as a percentage of discretionary income — powerful for borrowers with high debt relative to income:
| Plan | Payment | Forgiveness After |
|---|---|---|
| SAVE (Saving on a Valuable Education) | 5% of discretionary income for undergrad / 10% for grad | 20 years (undergrad) / 25 years (grad) |
| IBR (Income-Based Repayment) | 10–15% of discretionary income | 20 or 25 years |
| PAYE (Pay As You Earn) | 10% of discretionary income | 20 years |
| ICR (Income-Contingent Repayment) | 20% of discretionary income or 12-year fixed amount | 25 years |
Forgiven amounts under IDR may be taxable as income (check current law — this has changed multiple times).
Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF)
PSLF cancels the remaining federal student loan balance after:
- 10 years (120 payments) of qualifying payments
- Working full-time for a qualifying employer: federal, state, local, or tribal government; 501(c)(3) nonprofits
- Being enrolled in a qualifying repayment plan (IDR or Standard)
Examples of qualifying jobs: public school teachers, government employees, military, public hospital workers, most nonprofit workers.
PSLF was broken for years (early rejection rates were 99%+) but was reformed in 2021–2023 with the Temporary Expanded PSLF waiver. Hundreds of thousands have now received forgiveness. If you plan to pursue PSLF, submit the Employment Certification Form annually, not just at the end.
Teacher Loan Forgiveness
Teachers at low-income schools can receive up to $17,500 in federal loan forgiveness after 5 consecutive years. Less generous than PSLF for most teachers — evaluate which path makes more sense.
Strategies to Minimise Student Loan Debt
- Community college → transfer: Complete your first 2 years at community college ($4,000/year vs. $40,000/year), then transfer to a 4-year school for your degree
- In-state tuition: Out-of-state tuition at public universities is 2–3× in-state; residency matters
- Scholarships: FAFSA + institutional + external scholarships (Fastweb, Scholarships.com, local community scholarships); apply widely and early
- Work-study and campus jobs: 10–15 hours/week covers living expenses without large loans
- Graduate in 4 years (or less): Each extra semester = ~$15,000–$30,000 in additional cost
- CLEP / AP / Dual enrollment: Earn college credits in high school to shorten time to degree
- Negotiate aid packages: Colleges often match competing offers — ask your financial aid office
Should You Refinance?
Refinancing replaces your existing loans with a new private loan at a lower interest rate. This can save thousands in interest — but you permanently lose federal protections:
- No income-driven repayment
- No PSLF eligibility
- No federal forbearance or deferment options
- No future federal forgiveness programs
When refinancing makes sense: You have stable income, don't work in public service, have good credit (score 700+), and are confident you won't need IDR flexibility. If you have any federal loan forgiveness pathway, do not refinance.
Study Snapshot
Student Loans — FAFSA determines aid eligibility, federal loans (subsidised/unsubsidised) are better than private, income-driven repayment (SAVE, IBR, PAYE), PSLF (10 years + public employer = forgiveness), and strategies to minimise debt.
Concept Flow
Check Your Understanding
- What is the difference between a subsidised and an unsubsidised federal student loan?
- Why should you generally avoid refinancing federal loans into private loans?
- What three conditions must be met to qualify for Public Service Loan Forgiveness?
- What is the SAVE plan, and how does it determine your monthly payment?