When college costs exceed family resources plus financial aid, families can turn to Federal PLUS loans to fill this funding gap. Parents of dependent undergraduate students attending an eligible college, university, or trade school may take out a PLUS loan to fund their child's entire cost of attendance, minus any other financial aid. Parents may qualify for a PLUS loan regardless of their income or financial assets. PLUS loans may be used to pay authorized education expenses, including tuition, fees, room and board, supplies, and equipment—often including personal computers—as well as transportation and commuting costs.
Learn about SMS Hawaii®'s reduced-fee PLUS loans.
Note: Effective, July 1, 2006, graduate and professional students also may take out PLUS loans to pay their own educational expenses.
There are several other advantages to PLUS loans:
- Affordable interest rates. Effective for PLUS loans disbursed beginning July 1, 2006,
PLUS-loan interest rates are fixed at 8.5 percent. For PLUS loans disbursed
prior to July 1, 2006, interest rates are adjusted annually on July 1.
- Flexible repayment options. Effective for loans first disbursed July 1, 2008, parent PLUS
borrowers may opt to defer principal payments on their PLUS loans for up to
six months after the student for whose benefit the loan was issued ceases
being enrolled at least half time. PLUS loans to graduate and professional
students enter repayment within 60 days after the loan is fully disbursed,
unless the
student qualifies for deferment, for example, for being enrolled at least half time.
PLUS borrowers have several repayment options.
- Potential tax benefits.
Interest paid
on a PLUS loan repayment during the period may qualify for a federal
income-tax deduction. The maximum education-loan-interest deduction is $2,500.
Income limits and other conditions apply to the education-loan-interest
deduction. For additional information, taxpayers can order Internal Revenue
Service Publication 970, "Tax Benefits for Higher Education."
- Easy access. PLUS-loan information and applications are available through college financial-aid offices, private lenders, and student-loan guarantors. PLUS-loan borrowers must pass an adverse-credit check, but many lenders offer PLUS pre-qualification services to determine in advance if parents can pass the credit check. Some education-loan providers offer online loan applications and loan-by-phone services. The loan-approval process, including credit review, may take as little as a few seconds.
Parents who are considering borrowing through the PLUS-loan program should ask the following questions:
Have I exhausted other sources of financial aid? Before applying for a PLUS loan, parents should make sure they have thoroughly researched all forms of financial aid, especially grants and scholarships. To provide the optimum financial-aid package, college financial-aid administrators encourage families of college-bound students to complete and file the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. The financial-aid office, as well as the local library and Internet scholarship-search services, are good sources of information on grants and scholarships. If parents decide to take out a loan for college, the campus financial-aid staff can help determine how much they should borrow and answer questions about the loan-application process.
What if I don't pass the credit check?
To qualify for a PLUS loan, parents must pass
a credit evaluation. Unlike credit checks for other types of borrowing, the PLUS
credit check merely determines if the borrower has an "adverse credit history."
Indications of adverse credit include being 90 days or more past due on the
repayment of a debt, having been in default or foreclosure on a loan, or having
had a bankruptcy discharge or write-off of a federal education debt during the
past five years. Lenders are permitted to establish more stringent criteria than
these for adverse credit. Parents and graduate and professional students who
fail the PLUS credit check have the following options:
- A parent may still obtain a PLUS loan if a friend or
family member who can pass the credit check agrees to endorse the loan
application and assume the debt if the parent fails to repay the loan.
- A lender may still approve a PLUS loan if parents can
demonstrate extenuating circumstances, such as updated credit information
showing that they have brought their accounts up to date or have made
satisfactory arrangements to repay their debts. (Note that lenders can
approve parent-borrowers for PLUS loans, despite the borrowers' adverse
credit, if the borrowers are 180 days or less behind on mortgage loan or
medical payments and less than 90 days behind on repayment of any other debt.
This temporary provision is in effect through Dec. 31, 2009.
)
- When parents are denied a PLUS loan because of adverse credit, the student may qualify to borrow additional sums under the unsubsidized Federal Stafford-loan program.
When do my PLUS-loan payments begin and when
does interest start accruing on my loan?
Effective for loans first
disbursed July 1, 2008, parent PLUS borrowers may opt to defer principal
payments on their PLUS loans for up to six months after the student for whose
benefit the loan was issued ceases being enrolled at least half time. For PLUS
loans issued to graduate and professional students, loan repayment begins as
soon as the loan is fully disbursed, unless the borrower qualifies for loan
deferment, for example, for being enrolled at least half time. Interest also begins accumulating on the loan as soon as the loan is fully disbursed.
Parent or child, who pays?
Many parents establish arrangements with their children
to repay their PLUS loan. If their child fails to make the loan payments, however, the parent who signed for the PLUS loan is legally obligated to repay the debt.
How can I make the loan payments and pay tuition at the same time?
For parent PLUS
loans disbursed prior to July 1, 2008,
PLUS-loan repayment begins within 60 days after the loan is disbursed, so some parents may face cash-flow difficulties as they make PLUS-loan payments. For parents facing this problem, the following repayment strategies are worth considering:
- Forbearance. Lenders may
grant forbearance to PLUS borrowers while their children are still attending
college. Forbearance allows a borrower to postpone or reduce their monthly
loan payments temporarily; however, interest continues to accumulate during
the period of forbearance.
- Graduated repayment. The graduated-repayment option provides lower monthly payments initially.
Alternatives to PLUS loans
- Federal Stafford loans.
These federal student loans are usually the least-expensive loan option. Depending
on their year in college, dependent undergraduate students may borrow amounts ranging
from $5,500 to $7,500
a year, beginning July 1, 2008, and graduate and professional
students may borrow up to $20,500 a year to finance
their studies. Fixed
rates on new subsidized Stafford loans to undergraduates fall to
6 percent beginning July 1, 2008, and will be further
reduced in annual increments to 3.4 percent, beginning July 1, 2011. The interest
rate on all other Stafford loans disbursed since July 1, 2006, is fixed at
6.8 percent. Repayment is not required until six months after the student
leaves school. Depending on a family's eligibility for financial aid, the
student may qualify for a subsidized Stafford loan, on which the federal
government pays the interest while the student attends college, during the
six-month post-school grace period, or during periods of authorized deferment.
Unsubsidized Stafford loans are available without regard to financial need,
but there is no federal interest subsidy. Interest on Stafford loans may
qualify for the federal education-loan-interest tax deduction.
- Private, institutional and state education loans. Many lenders, a number of colleges and
universities, and several states offer education-loan programs to supplement
federal education loans. Interest rates, fees and repayment terms vary widely.
Parents should consult with the financial-aid staff of their child's college
for more information. Interest on these loans may qualify for the federal
education-loan-interest deduction.
- Home-equity loans. Parents who own their home may be able to borrow against the equity value that has accumulated over the years to fund higher-education expenses. Interest rates and repayment terms vary. Home-equity borrowers also may incur administrative costs, such as a home-appraisal fee. On certain home-equity loans, interest may be tax-deductible—if taxpayers itemize deductions on their federal tax returns. Of course, borrowers who fail to make payments on a home-equity loan risk losing their house.
About the PLUS Master Promissory Note
Parents may take out multiple PLUS loans by signing one PLUS MPN. The PLUS MPN is valid only for loans made for a single dependent student, however. To obtain loans for another dependent student, the parent must complete a separate PLUS MPN.
The PLUS MPN is valid for new loans even if the student changes schools or the loan is obtained with the support of another guarantor. If the parent changes lenders, however, a new note must be completed. At any time, the school, borrower or lender may choose to obtain a new PLUS MPN.
When using a PLUS MPN, if the parent obtains an endorser for a PLUS loan, the endorsement applies only to that particular loan. If the parent obtains new loans subsequent to the first endorsed loan, the parent must sign a new MPN and, if applicable, obtain an endorser signature for the subsequent loan.
Deferment, forbearance and
cancellation
PLUS-loan borrowers qualify to defer their loan
payments if they (the parent, in the case of a parent-borrower) are in school,
are unemployed, encounter specified economic hardships or are on active duty in
the military. PLUS-loan borrowers who don't meet any of these criteria, but who
still are having difficulty making their loan
payments, may appeal to their
lender for forbearance to temporarily reduce or delay their loan payments. In
either case, interest will continue to accrue during the period of deferment or
forbearance. Learn
more about deferment and forbearance.
PLUS-loan-repayment obligations can be cancelled if the borrower (and in the case of a parent-borrower, the dependent student on whose behalf the loan was issued) dies, the borrower meets federal criteria for total and permanent disability, the borrower proves undue hardship before a bankruptcy court and in certain other circumstances.