Jeff Mictabor is an enthusiast on the topic of student loan issues in the news. He has been writing for the past 10 years for a variety of education publications. He now offers his writing services on a freelance basis.
Hopefully by now your child has decided which college to attend this fall, and you are beginning to formulate your financial strategy for how you will fund the college experience. An excellent option is the PLUS Loan or Parent Loans for Undergraduate Students, recommended by NextStudent, a leading Phoenix-based education funding company.
As long as your child is enrolled in school at least half-time, this federally backed student loan allows parents to borrow funds to cover such things as tuition, housing and meals and even books and supplies, up to the total cost of the student’s education, minus any other aid.
In order to be eligible for the PLUS Loan, both students and their parents must complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). According to NextStudent, parents cannot be turned down for the PLUS Loan based on too high or too low an income, because the student loan is not based on financial need or how much money parents earn. However, parents can be turned down for an adverse credit history. Once the FAFSA is submitted and reviewed by the government, parents will receive a Student Aid Report, which will allow them to apply for the PLUS loan. Applying for a NextStudent PLUS Loan is simple and easy and may be done either over the phone in as few as five minutes, or it may be done online using E-Signature.
Availability after Tuition is Paid Makes PLUS Loans Convenient
A welcome feature of the PLUS Loan is that it is available even when parents already have paid for their child’s tuition and other related educational expenses. Although the maximum interest rate on the PLUS Loan is set by the federal government, NextStudent offers many opportunities for parents to save money through incentives.
For instance, when borrowers fund their PLUS Loan through NextStudent and pay via auto-debit, they will receive a .25 percent reduction on their interest rate. In addition, after making 12 consecutive on-time payments, borrowers will receive a 3 percent cash rebate on their remaining principal balance, and a 2 percent rate reduction after 48 consecutive on-time payments.
Grad PLUS Loans Offered by NextStudent
A similar federal student loan product called the Grad PLUS Loan is available for those individuals who decide to pursue graduate or further professional studies and enables students to fund their education themselves. Again, students may finance the entire cost of their graduate work (minus federal aid) and use the funds to pay for any associated costs such as supplies, books and other materials. While the Grad PLUS Loan Program’s maximum interest rates are set by the federal government, just like with the PLUS loan Program, NextStudent offers many money-saving competitive benefits for those pursuing postsecondary education. An additional incentive is that students have the option of postponing repayment until after graduation. Additionally, like PLUS Loan borrowers Grad PLUS borrowers may be eligible for a federal student loan consolidation.
NextStudent believes that getting an education is the best investment you can make, and it is dedicated to helping you pursue your education dreams by making college funding simple. Learn more about Student Loans, Private Student Loans, and Student Loan Consolidation.
- Related Articles
- Related Q&A
- Students Should Consolidate Student Loans Before July 1 Following Repeal of Single-Lender Rule
- Loan Consolidation Student Get the Information you Need
- Loan Consolidation Student Style - The Deal That Works For You
- Nextstudent Offers Discount Incentives for Students Who Consolidate Student Loans During Grace Period
- Why Student Loan Consolidation?
- Student Federal Loan Consolidation – 10 Facts you Must Know
- Student Loan Consolidation: Make your Student Loan Repayment Easier to Manage
- Why Student Loan Consolidation?




GED Study Tips: Notetaking
By: Michael Ormsby | 02/12/2009One learning skill that can help you study so that you learn faster and better is taking notes. Taking notes can help you stay focused on what you’re studying, help you actively think about what you’re learning, and give you study materials to review later. Have you ever thought about how you take notes, though? What will help you learn and remember easiest? Here are some tips.
Open My Eyes
By: Luke Schafli | 02/12/2009Learning to fly is a thrilling journey. The first lessons "fly by" at lightning speed, but as you practice and study the cockpit world seems to slow down. Eventually you take charge of your new environment, and navigate the skies on your own. Learning chess is very similar, and the goal in both is to achieve situational awareness.
Scholarship Program for Moms - Will Make A Difference to the Lives of Many
By: Marlon Jackson | 02/12/2009Why is the government very supportive in giving scholarship to moms? What are their reasons behind it?
Obama's Scholarship Program Designed for Mothers - Find Out If You Qualify
By: Marlon Jackson | 02/12/2009Find out if you are eligible to Obama's scholarship program for moms, the requirements are very basic.
Emotional Health in Schools gets off to a good start
By: Kim Bradley | 02/12/2009Trainers Kim Bradley and Louise Bliss showed students from Haydon School how to cope with their emotions with the easy to learn self help technique called EmoTrance (Emotional Transformation). This is a report of how the training helped several students and teachers with stress and kick started the Pilot Programme to educate teenagers about emotions.
Three Myths That Contribute to a Fear of Flying
By: hei55 | 02/12/2009The fear of flying is one of the most common phobias, and can be very difficult to overcome because of the many factors that can cause fear coming into play simultaneously. You may feel claustrophobic while flying, you may fear being “trapped” in the plane, you may have anxiety about the possibility of having a panic attack while on board, or you may fear crashing. Some of your fears may have no basis in reality at all, and are simply the result of a myths you have wrongly come to believe as f
How to Cope With Anxiety on an Airplane
By: hei55 | 02/12/2009A fear of flying is a very common, yet very treatable condition. It can be caused by a bad experience on board a plane, such as encountering severe turbulence while flying or a abnormal operation while on board such as an engine failure or emergency landing, but most commonly, what a fearful flier is afraid of while flying is simply the way that their fear and anxiety makes them feel.
Medical Entrance Exams - Ideas for better preparation
By: Adarsh Sharma | 02/12/2009Medical Entrance Exams are not the easy thing to experience, the preparation procedure includes a hard core concentration and deep analyzing of theories and practical work.
Income-Based Repayment for Federal Student Loans
By: Jeff Mictabor | 23/11/2009 | LoansEarlier this year, the U.S. Department of Education rolled out a new repayment option for student loan borrowers that could significantly reduce the monthly payments on your federal student loans.
Expanding Federal Regulation of Private Student Loans
By: Jeff Mictabor | 13/11/2009 | LoansIn a vote last month that fell for the most part along party lines, the House Financial Services Committee approved the creation of a Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which will expand federal oversight of nonfederal private student loans. At the same time, the committee rejected a proposal that would have included school-sponsored “gap loans” under the authority of the new CFPA.
Student Associations Lobby for Bill to Revamp Student Loans
By: Jeff Mictabor | 26/10/2009 | College & UniversityStudent governments and organizations at colleges and universities nationwide are pushing lawmakers to pass legislation that supporters say will make acquiring a higher education more accessible and affordable.
Pending Legislation Will Overhaul Student Loans
By: Jeff Mictabor | 29/09/2009 | LoansWith a 253 to 171 vote last week, the Democratic-led House of Representatives easily passed landmark legislation that would bring an end to the Federal Family Education Loan Program (FFELP), the program initiated by the Higher Education Act of 1965 to offer college students federally guaranteed student loans via private lenders.
Community Colleges Now Offering Four-Year Degrees
By: Jeff Mictabor | 29/07/2009 | College & UniversityIn this still-uncertain economy that remains rife with unemployment, hundreds of thousands of out-of-work blue- and white-collar professionals, competing for scarce available jobs, find themselves faced with the need to further their training, expand their skill sets, or in some cases change career paths altogether. Many are going back to school, some to obtain their first college degree, others to get an additional or more advanced degree that could give their résumé a much-needed competitive
Obama Ushers In “Fair and Transparent” Credit Card Regulations
By: Jeff Mictabor | 16/06/2009 | FinanceIn a sweeping move that aims to provide hundreds of thousands of Americans help with credit card debt, President Obama signed into law last month legislation that will put a stop to credit card companies imposing sudden rate hikes and exorbitant fees and penalties on cardholders.
New Repayment Break on Student Loans Begins July 1
By: Jeff Mictabor | 12/06/2009 | College & UniversityIt’s not an easy time to be graduating from college with student loans. With the unemployment rate soaring toward 10 percent and the average starting salary for college graduates down 2.2 percent this year