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I have a pair of student loans at 5.12% (the Sub and Unsub halves of a consolidation).

My lender offers a 0.25% rate reduction if I sign-up or auto debit - but only if I terminate online billing.

As it is, I am over-paying every month by $5-10 (taking it to the next round dollar amount (eg $250 vs $242.19)), and occasional extra payments (1-2 per year).

Questions:

  • can I keep paying extra times / amounts during the year if I subscribe to auto debit?
  • all things being equal (ie no extra payments), is the auto debit a better deal for paying-off the loan than the few extra dollars tossed at the payment due each month (in my example above, ~$5/mo)?
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    Being in the automatic payment program of either of the two processors I've dealt with has not precluded me from making additional payments. Sign up for the program. Then make additional payments via your bank's billpay system or via a written check whenever you want.
    – Todd
    Commented Jun 26, 2014 at 17:00

3 Answers 3

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I would contact whoever your loan is through for more details, but I will explain to you how mine works.

Basically I have a auto-debit that happens every month. On that same page is a form for "additonal payment", which will just add to the payment I've made.

I'm not sure the reason for reduced interest, but I also receive a discount on my interest for signing up for auto debit. If I cancel the auto-debit, the reduced interest rate returns to the actual interest rate.

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    I suspect the reason for reduced interest is that it reduces the risk to the lender of you failing to give them back their money.
    – Brandon
    Commented Jun 28, 2014 at 16:54
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Can't you do both? Take the lower rate, but still continue to make the slightly elevated payment.

for example:

  • original monthly payment: $242.19
  • elevated payment: $250.00
  • new payment with lower rate (made up number): $239.19
  • new elevated payment: $250.00

The payment is the same but you are now paying it off $3 a month faster.

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  • that's part of the problem I'm having: I can't find out what the auto debit will do unless I terminate online billing. The lender is very vague in its policies pre-signup, and I'm concerned it would be hard to undo the shift.
    – warren
    Commented Jun 26, 2014 at 14:45
  • @warren - I'd be shocked if the answer is you cannot make additional payments for however much you want, or adjust the auto debit. But if you're worried about it, why not simply call the bank and ask?
    – TTT
    Commented Jun 27, 2014 at 18:53
  • @TTT - I've done that in the mean time, and the answer they'll give verbally is, "yes". Why they can't put this on their website, I have no idea :)
    – warren
    Commented Jun 27, 2014 at 19:53
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My student loans and my wife's student loans got sold a few times, so the way it works kept changing.

We used the auto-debit for the interest rate reduction. Interest is compounded, so anything to lower that interest rate is a good thing. Then we paid extra. I don't recall there being a way to make the payment amount more, so we just made additional manual payments.

I like the manual extra payments because it gives us the flexibility that if things change, like a job loss or a car emergency or something that alters our financial situation, we can simply not make an extra payment for a while and then go back to it.

I do remember it being a hassle to make the extra payment count the way we wanted to. My car loan and mortgage allowed us to designate additional payments as principle-only, which was really nice because we could pay down our loan even faster. Our student loans, however, always applied extra payments towards pending interest first (even if it's only a few cents or dollars so far), then the rest went to principle.

We both started with Federal Direct Loan and their site did not have a way to make an "extra" payment unless we called customer service. An extra payment simply was an advance on future payments. My first year out of college, I got a nice tax refund and put the whole thing into my student loan. Guess what? I was off the hook for 6 months because they treated my payment as 6 months of payments. Argh. I didn't think much of it or care at the time, but in hind sight, that was not in my best interest.

Then they revamped their web site, maybe in 2011 or 2012. This provided a way to make the payment not count as an advance. It still went to outstanding interest first, but at least I could make an extra payment that was actually extra.

Then they sold my loan to MOHELA and that was a nightmare for many other reasons. I don't remember it very well because when it happened, I paid the whole thing off as quickly as I could to get away from them.

My wife's loan got sold to a similar company and they only handled extra payments as non-advances if you called and spoke with their customer service, which was staffed with people who didn't know what they were doing and gave incorrect advice (I know it's incorrect because calling back a week later and speaking to somebody else yielded a different answer).

Also, if you are only paying a few dollars extra, be careful about when you make the payment. Interest accrues daily, so if you make a $5 extra payment a week after you make your auto-payment towards the minimum, that $5 may just go towards next month's interest. Try to make your next payment as soon after your auto-payment as possible - the next day, if possible.

TL;DR

Start with the auto-debit because that is a free interest rate reduction, then make extra payments (not extra money on your payments). Making the extra payment count as an extra payment may be a hassle, but it can be done and you should do it.

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