Student Bill of Rights
- The right to unbiased advice about loans and lenders from your financial aid office.
- The right to choose the lender that is best for you, even if that lender is not included on your school's preferred lender lists.
- The right to know what criteria your school uses to select preferred lenders. And the right to know whether preferred lenders are paying the school or financial aid officials.
- The right to know what benefits or rate discounts lenders offer, and whether those benefits or discounts will be available immediately, or only after a certain number of consecutive timely payments.
- The right to know if a lender has agreed to sell its loans to another lender.
- The right to know whether borrower benefits and discounts will continue if the loan is sold.
- The right to know what interest rate you will be paying for the loan before you borrow.
- The right to exhaust your federal borrowing options (Stafford, PLUS, and Perkins) before turning to higher-cost private loans.
Questions to ask your financial aid office and lenders:
- How does the financial aid office select preferred lenders? Does the school or financial aid officials receive any payments, benefits, or perks from lenders?
- What borrower benefits and rate discounts do the lenders offer? Which of those benefits are contingent on your making a certain number of consecutive timely payments?
- What percentages of borrowers actually receive the borrower benefits or rate discounts that are contingent on a certain number of timely payments?
- Does the lender typically sell its loans? Has the lender agreed to sell loans to another lender?
- Will my borrower benefits and rate discounts continue if my loan is sold?
- How many students actually receive a preferred lender's advertised "as low as" interest rate?
- What is the interest rate of the loan? Will the interest rate remain the same for the entire life of the loan?
- When will repayment begin, and will interest accrue while I'm in school?
- What is the total amount I will need to pay over the life of the loan, and what will my monthly payments be?
- How long is the repayment period for the loan, and is there a penalty for paying back the loan before the end of that period?
- What are the penalties for missing monthly payments?
Remember: If you pay your school bills on a credit card, make sure you can pay the amount due in full. Otherwise, you may find yourself with a student loan in the guise of a high interest credit card debt. Shop wisely. A student loan is a serious financial commitment.