Why do people think IBR is only for public interest?
Posted: Tue Apr 19, 2011 5:53 pm
Why do people think grad plus loans IBR only counts for PI and Gov?
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IBR: Income Based RepaymentStanford4Me wrote:I don't think people think it is only for public intrest. It's just that the most beneficial terms (forgiveness after 10 years) require public interest/government work, and people tend to focus on that.
Not really...bk187 wrote:Because if you are doing 25 year IBR you could have probably just paid your loans off normally.
Hmm. I retract my previous statement then and offer how I personally feel about it:aliarrow wrote:Not really...bk187 wrote:Because if you are doing 25 year IBR you could have probably just paid your loans off normally.
$150,000 loan
income = $60,000
25 year repayment (normal, pay off the loan) = $1,100/month
25 year IBR = $550/month
I did the math, the tax bombs really are awful.bk187 wrote:Hmm. I retract my previous statement then and offer how I personally feel about it:aliarrow wrote:Not really...bk187 wrote:Because if you are doing 25 year IBR you could have probably just paid your loans off normally.
$150,000 loan
income = $60,000
25 year repayment (normal, pay off the loan) = $1,100/month
25 year IBR = $550/month
Fuck if I'm going to be paying back my law school loans until the 2030's, Only to be hit with a massive tax bomb when 2030 comes
Mind providing a little insight on this tax bomb? Thought I don't plan on doing (or even qualifying) for IBR, I'm curious.aliarrow wrote:I did the math, the tax bombs really are awful.bk187 wrote:
Hmm. I retract my previous statement then and offer how I personally feel about it:
Fuck if I'm going to be paying back my law school loans until the 2030's, Only to be hit with a massive tax bomb when 2030 comes
Depends on the kind of loans she took, the amount of loans she took, and the amount of money she makes. As mentioned above:tipler4213 wrote:Do social workers qualify for IBR?
My (uninformed) finance is going to get her MSW and do social work/counseling--worried about the Ivy League debt she is going to have to not make any money. In conjunction with my law school debt, my future seems bleak...
If you want to see the math heres a calculator I made (use the copy of the master copy - yeah this is an authorized alt, I don't care if you guys know, I just needed a different name because of adcomms and my apps, meh, I doubt the adcomms will look around this much to re-tag my identify)Stanford4Me wrote: Mind providing a little insight on this tax bomb? Thought I don't plan on doing (or even qualifying) for IBR, I'm curious.
Well to be honest that kinda asks you to project exactly what tax law will be in 25 years. But, forgiveness of debt is income, so you are taxed on every dollar forgiven. Say your payments only covered interest that whole time with IBR (I haven't looked into IBR, but that actually seems generous with those payment amounts.) So you are forgiven of 150,000 and have to report that as income. Who the hell knows what the tax brackets will be, I suspect they will go up a lot. But let's say you make 80k that year and therefore are taxed on 230,000 at a generously low 30%. You owe 69,000 in tax on your 80,000 in income.Stanford4Me wrote:Mind providing a little insight on this tax bomb? Thought I don't plan on doing (or even qualifying) for IBR, I'm curious.aliarrow wrote:I did the math, the tax bombs really are awful.bk187 wrote:
Hmm. I retract my previous statement then and offer how I personally feel about it:
Fuck if I'm going to be paying back my law school loans until the 2030's, Only to be hit with a massive tax bomb when 2030 comes
That's crazy.YaSvoboden wrote:
Well to be honest that kinda asks you to project exactly what tax law will be in 25 years. But, forgiveness of debt is income, so you are taxed on every dollar forgiven. Say your payments only covered interest that whole time with IBR (I haven't looked into IBR, but that actually seems generous with those payment amounts.) So you are forgiven of 150,000 and have to report that as income. Who the hell knows what the tax brackets will be, I suspect they will go up a lot. But let's say you make 80k that year and therefore are taxed on 230,000 at a generously low 30%. You owe 69,000 in tax on your 80,000 in income.
Obviously there are a lot of assumptions in there, but it doesn't look pretty for that year.
No, that's VERY mild and generous.Stanford4Me wrote:That's crazy.YaSvoboden wrote:
Well to be honest that kinda asks you to project exactly what tax law will be in 25 years. But, forgiveness of debt is income, so you are taxed on every dollar forgiven. Say your payments only covered interest that whole time with IBR (I haven't looked into IBR, but that actually seems generous with those payment amounts.) So you are forgiven of 150,000 and have to report that as income. Who the hell knows what the tax brackets will be, I suspect they will go up a lot. But let's say you make 80k that year and therefore are taxed on 230,000 at a generously low 30%. You owe 69,000 in tax on your 80,000 in income.
Obviously there are a lot of assumptions in there, but it doesn't look pretty for that year.
Well 60k is generous. Its safer to assume a $40k starting income, and over the course of 25 years averaging $60k if lucky.Flanker1067 wrote:While I appreciate the analysis, it is completely ridiculous to calculate the payments that you will make in 25 years and assume a 60K per year income.
What kind of scenario involves making the same salary for 25 years straight? You are going to be ruined by inflation.aliarrow wrote:Not really...bk187 wrote:Because if you are doing 25 year IBR you could have probably just paid your loans off normally.
$150,000 loan
income = $60,000
net pay (assume state w/ no income tax) = $46,000
25 year repayment (normal, pay off the loan) = $1,100/month = $13,200 per year = 28.7% of your take home pay.
25 year IBR = $550/month = $6,600/year = 14.34% of take home pay
I was speaking in a vacuum. Obviously I understand the savings are much greater than the tax implications. That doesn't change the fact that I think it's crazy to pay that much in taxes in one year with such a low income. I imagine they have some alternative way of fulfilling your tax liability. If not, I hope the people who go into this program understand they need to set money aside to cover the liability.aliarrow wrote:No, that's VERY mild and generous.Stanford4Me wrote:That's crazy.YaSvoboden wrote:
Well to be honest that kinda asks you to project exactly what tax law will be in 25 years. But, forgiveness of debt is income, so you are taxed on every dollar forgiven. Say your payments only covered interest that whole time with IBR (I haven't looked into IBR, but that actually seems generous with those payment amounts.) So you are forgiven of 150,000 and have to report that as income. Who the hell knows what the tax brackets will be, I suspect they will go up a lot. But let's say you make 80k that year and therefore are taxed on 230,000 at a generously low 30%. You owe 69,000 in tax on your 80,000 in income.
Obviously there are a lot of assumptions in there, but it doesn't look pretty for that year.
Yeah I know, I wasn't speaking directly to you, just elaborating that Sv's analysis was a generous one.Stanford4Me wrote:I was speaking in a vacuum. Obviously I understand the savings are much greater than the tax implications. That doesn't change the fact that I think it's crazy to pay that much in taxes in one year with such a low income. I imagine they have some alternative way of fulfilling your tax liability. If not, I hope the people who go into this program understand they need to set money aside to cover the liability.aliarrow wrote:No, that's VERY mild and generous.Stanford4Me wrote:That's crazy.YaSvoboden wrote:
Well to be honest that kinda asks you to project exactly what tax law will be in 25 years. But, forgiveness of debt is income, so you are taxed on every dollar forgiven. Say your payments only covered interest that whole time with IBR (I haven't looked into IBR, but that actually seems generous with those payment amounts.) So you are forgiven of 150,000 and have to report that as income. Who the hell knows what the tax brackets will be, I suspect they will go up a lot. But let's say you make 80k that year and therefore are taxed on 230,000 at a generously low 30%. You owe 69,000 in tax on your 80,000 in income.
Obviously there are a lot of assumptions in there, but it doesn't look pretty for that year.
One thing to take into account is that after the 25 year IBR loan forgiveness the amount forgiven is treated as taxable income.aliarrow wrote:Not really...bk187 wrote:Because if you are doing 25 year IBR you could have probably just paid your loans off normally.
$150,000 loan
income = $60,000
net pay (assume state w/ no income tax) = $46,000
25 year repayment (normal, pay off the loan) = $1,100/month = $13,200 per year = 28.7% of your take home pay.
25 year IBR = $550/month = $6,600/year = 14.34% of take home pay