This makes no sense. You are not saving much on interest by refinancing and I would guess that you aren't putting much away in your savings with 3k/month loan paymentAnonymous User wrote:Debt: 145k
Income: $160k + 15k bonus
Refinanced entirely to SoFi, fixed rate of 3.99%
5 year repayment plan
Monthly payments: $2900/month
Student loan payments: get advice and actual numbers here Forum
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- gk101
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
Does anyone ever feel embarrassed about huge student loans? I'm somewhat seriously dating someone who is very financially savvy and got through grad school with minimal to no loans on her/his own (makes a small income through investments, worked through school and had scholarships, even manages to own property). In contrast, I have ~$125k in student loans and don't live very super frugally (although not lavishly either) in school. I do have excellent credit, didn't get any help from anyone with school, and am NYC-big law bound... but I feel kinda financially dumb. How have others dealt with sharing their loan situations with significant others?
- Old Gregg
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
Anonymous User wrote:Does anyone ever feel embarrassed about huge student loans? I'm somewhat seriously dating someone who is very financially savvy and got through grad school with minimal to no loans on her/his own (makes a small income through investments, worked through school and had scholarships, even manages to own property). In contrast, I have ~$125k in student loans and don't live very super frugally (although not lavishly either) in school. I do have excellent credit, didn't get any help from anyone with school, and am NYC-big law bound... but I feel kinda financially dumb. How have others dealt with sharing their loan situations with significant others?
grow a pair
- JenDarby
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
3.99% is probably around a 50% decrease in average interest rate (80k plus of that debt could easily have been at 7.9%), which is more than nothing. Also with biglaw and assuming no huge family expenses then this person could certainly be saving and paying $2,900/month.gk101 wrote:This makes no sense. You are not saving much on interest by refinancing and I would guess that you aren't putting much away in your savings with 3k/month loan paymentAnonymous User wrote:Debt: 145k
Income: $160k + 15k bonus
Refinanced entirely to SoFi, fixed rate of 3.99%
5 year repayment plan
Monthly payments: $2900/month
- gk101
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
I haven't done the math in a while but for a 5 year repayment plan, I think he would have come out ahead (or maybe pay a little bit more in interest) going on a 15 year repayment plan with the feds and throwing anything above the minimum payments on the high interest loans. That is, this person would still pay $2900/month but have most of it going to the principal on the 7.9% loans. When I ran the numbers for my loans, it didn't make sense to give up the options that come with a federal loan for relatively small savings on a 5 year repayment plan.JenDarby wrote:3.99% is probably around a 50% decrease in average interest rate (80k plus of that debt could easily have been at 7.9%), which is more than nothing. Also with biglaw and assuming no huge family expenses then this person could certainly be saving and paying $2,900/month.gk101 wrote:This makes no sense. You are not saving much on interest by refinancing and I would guess that you aren't putting much away in your savings with 3k/month loan paymentAnonymous User wrote:Debt: 145k
Income: $160k + 15k bonus
Refinanced entirely to SoFi, fixed rate of 3.99%
5 year repayment plan
Monthly payments: $2900/month
I guess what stuck out to me about his plan was that it was not the risk averse option (no refinancing because what if he loses his job) and it wasn't really taking advantage of the low interest rates. Also, if the person was committed to 5 year repayment, I'd have thought the variable rate would be a better option.
I don't think the person necessarily made a bad choice. I am just curious about their reasoning
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- JenDarby
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
^ ah, that makes sense. I read your initial post as more critical. I agree that in anon's circumstances I probably would have made different decisions (i.e. variable) as well.
- 15 styx
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
Thoughts on paying off $80K. A. Present plan is paying $11K a year for 10 years; B. Paying $19K a year for 5 years. B is doable without much strain but having an extra $8K a year is obviously helpful.
Thinking on plan A, when bonuses kick in I could take the bonus $ to cut 10 years by a couple/few years.
Thinking on plan A, when bonuses kick in I could take the bonus $ to cut 10 years by a couple/few years.
- gk101
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
depends on the interest rates dude15 styx wrote:Thoughts on paying off $80K. A. Present plan is paying $11K a year for 10 years; B. Paying $19K a year for 5 years. B is doable without much strain but having an extra $8K a year is obviously helpful.
Thinking on plan A, when bonuses kick in I could take the bonus $ to cut 10 years by a couple/few years.
- 84651846190
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
kind of ironic that some of the people in this thread may have put more thought into how to best pay off their ginormous student loan balances than they did to decide to attend law school in the first place
- Old Gregg
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
makes sense. people don't appreciate the impact of these financial commitments until they actually have to act on them. easy to sign a promissory note before 1L, but hard to see most of your paycheck in NYC go to rent, loans and taxes.Biglaw_Associate_V20 wrote:kind of ironic that some of the people in this thread may have put more thought into how to best pay off their ginormous student loan balances than they did to decide to attend law school in the first place
- 15 styx
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- Joined: Mon Oct 13, 2014 5:04 pm
Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
6.7%gk101 wrote:depends on the interest rates dude15 styx wrote:Thoughts on paying off $80K. A. Present plan is paying $11K a year for 10 years; B. Paying $19K a year for 5 years. B is doable without much strain but having an extra $8K a year is obviously helpful.
Thinking on plan A, when bonuses kick in I could take the bonus $ to cut 10 years by a couple/few years.
BTW: I work with associates (at the same pay) whose debts are substantially higher because they opted for a higher ranked LS. For those looking at law schools, if there is a take-away from this, leverage your stats.
- fats provolone
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
nah I'm taking the same "fuck it, I'll figure it out later" approach to bothBiglaw_Associate_V20 wrote:kind of ironic that some of the people in this thread may have put more thought into how to best pay off their ginormous student loan balances than they did to decide to attend law school in the first place
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
Why is the 10-year interest rate (6.71%) lower than the 5-year interest rate (6.97%)?15 styx wrote:6.7%gk101 wrote:depends on the interest rates dude15 styx wrote:Thoughts on paying off $80K. A. Present plan is paying $11K a year for 10 years; B. Paying $19K a year for 5 years. B is doable without much strain but having an extra $8K a year is obviously helpful.
Thinking on plan A, when bonuses kick in I could take the bonus $ to cut 10 years by a couple/few years.
BTW: I work with associates (at the same pay) whose debts are substantially higher because they opted for a higher ranked LS. For those looking at law schools, if there is a take-away from this, leverage your stats.
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
I'm the clerk above with the 2.74% variable after refinancing with DRB. I didn't have any trouble getting that rate just based on a big law offer, despite not actually working there.bk1 wrote:Salary may impact your ability to refinance in the sense that you might need a cosigner to refinance at all.Anonymous User wrote:Currently clerking, so making ~$65k. Will be doing big law next year. I have pretty good credit... $175k in loans all at over 6%. Does it make sense to refinance now, or will I get a much better refinance rate if I wait until I start big law? Am I wrong in assuming salary is a factor considered by SoFi and the like when setting our interest rate? TIA.
- Old Gregg
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
Seems like DRB is more amenable to giving lower interest rates than SoFi is. Has that been people's general experiences ITT? Just curious.
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
Handful of Yelp reviews seem to indicate better rates than SoFi but a worse process. I'm also curious what people who've dealt with DRB ITT have experienced.zweitbester wrote:Seems like DRB is more amenable to giving lower interest rates than SoFi is. Has that been people's general experiences ITT? Just curious.
- JenDarby
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
I will share my experience once I get my rate quote back from DRB. I also do like that DRB explicitly offers you to add a cosigner. I submitted my application without one (to mirror Sofi) but if my rate doesn't come back more favorable then I might add my SO as a co-signer to see if that changes things.zweitbester wrote:Seems like DRB is more amenable to giving lower interest rates than SoFi is. Has that been people's general experiences ITT? Just curious.
So far my process seems way quicker with DRB, but we will see.
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- Old Gregg
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
You can add SO's income to yours for purposes of a better interest rate, but you don't have to make him a co-signer. Just send in his W2s.
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
I hate having six figure debt and want to pay it off asap. Half my loans were 7.8%, the other half 6.8%, and so this refinance is saving me about $400/month in interest.gk101 wrote:I don't think the person necessarily made a bad choice. I am just curious about their reasoning
I don't have a ton of other expenses right now, and even with $3k/month towards debt I have $5k+ for living and other saving. I feel secure in my job, and I'm not planning to leave biglaw until my debt is gone or manageable
Went with fixed instead of variable since 3.99% is pretty damn low, and I was willing to forgo a slightly greater drop to protect against a future LIBOR rise. My choices aren't for everyone, and refinancing definitely involves risks, but this made sense for me.
- existenz
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
DRB initially offered me a better rate, but I got SoFi to match and beat it. DRB's customer service seemed much worse so I was glad to avoid.bk1 wrote:Handful of Yelp reviews seem to indicate better rates than SoFi but a worse process. I'm also curious what people who've dealt with DRB ITT have experienced.zweitbester wrote:Seems like DRB is more amenable to giving lower interest rates than SoFi is. Has that been people's general experiences ITT? Just curious.
- Old Gregg
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
SoFi actually does that? Didn't know.existenz wrote:DRB initially offered me a better rate, but I got SoFi to match and beat it. DRB's customer service seemed much worse so I was glad to avoid.bk1 wrote:Handful of Yelp reviews seem to indicate better rates than SoFi but a worse process. I'm also curious what people who've dealt with DRB ITT have experienced.zweitbester wrote:Seems like DRB is more amenable to giving lower interest rates than SoFi is. Has that been people's general experiences ITT? Just curious.
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- Johann
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
Yeah this was dumb. Shoulda 10 yeared this for sure or done what gk said.gk101 wrote:This makes no sense. You are not saving much on interest by refinancing and I would guess that you aren't putting much away in your savings with 3k/month loan paymentAnonymous User wrote:Debt: 145k
Income: $160k + 15k bonus
Refinanced entirely to SoFi, fixed rate of 3.99%
5 year repayment plan
Monthly payments: $2900/month
- Johann
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
Plan A.gk101 wrote:depends on the interest rates dude15 styx wrote:Thoughts on paying off $80K. A. Present plan is paying $11K a year for 10 years; B. Paying $19K a year for 5 years. B is doable without much strain but having an extra $8K a year is obviously helpful.
Thinking on plan A, when bonuses kick in I could take the bonus $ to cut 10 years by a couple/few years.
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
Debt: 65k ($25k undergrad, $40k law school)
Income: 60k
Payments: 2k a month
Plan: live frugally and pay 2k a month until all 6.8 percent loans are paid off, which should be summer 2015. After that, I'm not sure
Notes: graduated from T1 strong regional May 2014 and live in low COL area. I work at a small law firm 9-5. I have never left the office later than 5:30, have never taken work home, and have never gone to the office on a weekend. So far, I'm glad that I went to law school, although I worry about where I will be in 5 years
Income: 60k
Payments: 2k a month
Plan: live frugally and pay 2k a month until all 6.8 percent loans are paid off, which should be summer 2015. After that, I'm not sure
Notes: graduated from T1 strong regional May 2014 and live in low COL area. I work at a small law firm 9-5. I have never left the office later than 5:30, have never taken work home, and have never gone to the office on a weekend. So far, I'm glad that I went to law school, although I worry about where I will be in 5 years
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Re: Student loan payments: Actual numbers
Loans: ~$150K of principal left (spouse has about $80K)
Interest: 5.5-5.75% (mostly refi'd through DRB) (spouse's interest rate is around 3.75% because we went with variable for most of those loans)
Monthly payment: ~$1500 (plus $650 per month for spouse's payment)
Term: 15 years
Savings: ~$30K
Retirement: ~$20K (continuing to max my firm's match)
Mortgage: ~$3K monthly payment
Salary: ~$180K (but may take a haircut if I go in-house) plus spouse's ~$60K
Honestly, I've hit a bit of a crossroads as to what to do with extra cash. I've recently switched to saving aggressively rather than throwing the extra at student loans, in part because I have a mortgage so it would be nice to have an extra cushion. At the same time, I am confident in my job security right now and it feels dumb to leave a bunch of cash sitting there making 1%. On the other hand, I own a condo and am contemplating trying to sock away extra cash for a downpayment on a house so I could possibly hang onto the condo and rent it out when we move in a few years. I'm considering talking to a financial advisor at this point to get a second opinion, but I'm skeptical of the value add.
Anyone have thoughts on value add of a financial advisor?
Interest: 5.5-5.75% (mostly refi'd through DRB) (spouse's interest rate is around 3.75% because we went with variable for most of those loans)
Monthly payment: ~$1500 (plus $650 per month for spouse's payment)
Term: 15 years
Savings: ~$30K
Retirement: ~$20K (continuing to max my firm's match)
Mortgage: ~$3K monthly payment
Salary: ~$180K (but may take a haircut if I go in-house) plus spouse's ~$60K
Honestly, I've hit a bit of a crossroads as to what to do with extra cash. I've recently switched to saving aggressively rather than throwing the extra at student loans, in part because I have a mortgage so it would be nice to have an extra cushion. At the same time, I am confident in my job security right now and it feels dumb to leave a bunch of cash sitting there making 1%. On the other hand, I own a condo and am contemplating trying to sock away extra cash for a downpayment on a house so I could possibly hang onto the condo and rent it out when we move in a few years. I'm considering talking to a financial advisor at this point to get a second opinion, but I'm skeptical of the value add.
Anyone have thoughts on value add of a financial advisor?
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