Undergraduate Student Financial Aid – Definitions of
Loan Terms
Auto-debit.
Repayment of a loan by auto-debit occurs when the borrower sets up an
agreement with the loan servicer to deduct monthly loan payments directly from the
borrower’s bank account. Lenders may
offer a slight interest rate deduction for this type of payment.
Capitalization. A term
used to describe a method of computing interest. To capitalize a loan means to
add all interest that has accrued to the principal loan amount. Once a loan is
capitalized, the new loan amount (both principal and interest) is the amount upon
which interest will accrue.
Co-signer/Co-borrower. An additional applicant added to a loan to meet
creditworthiness guidelines, often a parent.
A co-signer/co-borrower has the same legal responsibility on the loan as
the primary borrower.
Credit-Based. Credit-based lending considers past credit history
and income to determine eligibility for a loan. Repayment history,
delinquencies, and length of time accounts have been established are
considerations in determining a borrower's ability to obtain a loan. The credit
history of both the student (if he or she has a credit history) and the
co-applicant will be reviewed. PLUS and
private loans are credit based.
Credit Score. Your credit score is a number based on the
information in your credit file that shows how likely you may be to pay a loan
back on time — the higher your score, the less risk you represent.
Deferment. A time during
which the borrower is not required to make payment. During deferment, interest
will accrue on the loan, although the borrower is not obligated to make payment
on the loan amount.
Enrollment
Status. Your educational
institution's own classification of your attendance, important to your
eligibility for student loans. Federal
Stafford, PLUS, and private loans require that you be enrolled at least half
time.
Fixed Interest Rate. An interest rate which remains
the same throughout the life of the loan, through repayment.
Grace Period. The length of time a borrower is granted before the
first payment is due. Grace period may refer to the time between disbursement
of funds and the first payment if immediate repayment is required, or the
length of time from the end of a deferment period to the first payment.
Guarantee Fee.
A fee charged for
federally backed student loans. Also normally deducted from the gross loan
proceeds and paid on your behalf by your lender to the guarantor.
Interest. Money paid for
money borrowed. Most interest is computed using a percentage of the outstanding
balance of the loan.
LIBOR. LIBOR means the London Interbank
Offered Rate. LIBOR represents an average of the interest rates on
dollar-denominated deposits, also known as Eurodollars, traded between banks in
London. LIBOR
is among the most common of benchmark interest rate indices used to make
adjustments to variable rate loans.
Origination Fee. The fee, charged by the lender, for services provided
in connection with the origination and funding of the loan.
Prime Rate. The Prime Rate is defined by The Wall Street Journal
as "The base rate on corporate loans posted by at least 75% of the
nation's 30 largest banks." A good
website to check loan rates is http://www.primerate.net/.
Subsidized
(Stafford loan). The
subsidized portion of a Federal Stafford loan has its interest paid by the
federal government during the in-school (at least half-time enrollment) period,
and for six months after graduation or a drop to less than half-time
enrollment. The FAFSA (Free Application
for Student Aid) is used to determine how much subsidized Stafford
loan a student may borrow.
Unsubsidized
(Stafford loan). The
unsubsidized portion of a Federal Stafford loan accrues interest from the time
of disbursement. The FAFSA (Free
Application for Student Aid) is used to determine how much subsidized Stafford loan a student may borrow.
Variable Interest. An
interest rate that may change depending on the terms of the loan.
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