Limit Your Borrowing
The easiest way to reduce any loan costs is by eliminating loans completely or by borrowing a minimal amount. You can reduce your need for student loans by:
Reduce Expenses
Little changes can add up over time when you're trying to cut back on expenses. For example, you can:
- Rent or buy used books for classes.
- Drink tap water instead of buying bottled water.
- Make your own cup of coffee instead of purchasing to-go coffee.
- Go to a matinee instead of an evening movie.
- Take advantage of free or less expensive entertainment events on campus.
- Walk or bike to classes and leave the car at home.
Pay Interest
If you do borrow money, you can prevent that loan amount from increasing by paying all accruing interest while you're in school. Making monthly payments of interest prevents interest from capitalizing, or being added to the principal balance of your loan. This keeps your loan balance from increasing while you're in school.
Capitalization is a process where unpaid interest is added to the principal balance of your loan, increasing the principal balance. Each time interest is capitalized, the principal balance increases. Because the principal balance is larger, more interest then accrues each day. Over time, this could make your loan balance more than the amount you originally borrowed.
If you choose to make interest payments while you're in school and pay all the interest before it capitalizes, your loan amount after college will equal the amount you took out before or during college. If you defer repayment and do not pay interest during college, your loan amount could increase significantly before you graduate and then you will be paying interest on both your original loan amount and all the interest that has capitalized. That means you will likely end up paying more over the life of the loan.
Most student loans do not require payments while you are enrolled in school at least half time and for a short period of time after you leave school or drop below half-time enrollment. However, interest continues to accrue daily on student loans during this in-school deferment and subsequent grace or separation period. If you do not make any payments to cover accruing interest during these periods, it may be capitalized, or added to your principal balance, when the deferment and grace or separation periods end.
As you continue in your repayment period, if your payments are not enough to cover accruing interest, that interest is also capitalized at certain times according to the terms you agreed to when you took out the loan. Outstanding (unpaid accrued) interest may capitalize at certain intervals, such as annually or quarterly, on private student loans. It may also capitalize at the end of any assistance period, such as deferment or forbearance, on private and federal loans.