Student
Loans - Credit History and Student Loans
Many common student loan programs are not credit-based.
Stafford and Perkins are based solely on need and don't even do
credit checks. But not all will qualify and those programs will
often cover less than 100% of the needed amount, especially
considering the high cost of education today.
Many students and their families will, therefore, want to
supplement those with credit-based student loans. When they do,
being able to show a good credit report to evaluators will
result in better access to funds, with the best possible
interest rate.
As with any credit-based loan, a prior history of bad credit
doesn't make getting funds impossible. But it can be much more
difficult and often carries a higher interest rate.
Avoiding bad credit history can therefore be the difference
between getting a loan or, if you do get one, repaying much
more than you would have with good credit. But what is good or
bad credit?
The first factor any loan officer will consider is the FICO
score. The FICO is a number calculated by the major credit
agencies based on a secret, proprietary formula. Though the
exact equation isn't public, several criteria are known, and
even obvious.
FICO scores are based on outstanding debt and defaults,
number of late payments and how late - 30 days, 60 days, 90
days or longer, amount of credit available, number of recent
credit inquiries and other factors. All these are weighed and
weighted so that, for example, a default counts very heavily,
as do any late payments, with larger late days counting more.
The number of recent credit inquiries counts less.
Many students won't have a FICO score at all, not having
credit cards or other forms of loan that would generate the
data on which the score is based. But the majority of students
are judged by the parents' credit history, in regard to
granting loans. While student credit history is important, the
parents income and credit history typically count for more in
making a final decision.
Both parties need to have good credit. First and foremost,
that means a FICO of above 650, and the higher the better.
Having a score lower than that won't make getting a loan
impossible, but it may trigger the need to supply additional
information that can influence the decision. And getting that
extra data into the hands of actual individuals who can be
influenced is not easy.
Apart from the FICO score, and related to it, there are a
number of factors that prospective borrowers should keep in
mind.
Paying on time is important. Evidence of a history of late
payments, incurring late payment charges is evidence of a bad
credit risk in the eyes of lenders. Staying within available
credit limits is important, as well. Avoiding over limit and
other penalties shows a willingness to defer immediate
gratification and accept responsibility. Creditors are judging
not just numbers, but character as well.
Limiting the number and maximum balance amount on credit
cards can also help. Excessive credit inquiries suggest to
lenders that someone is having difficulty meeting current debt
loads. That's a signal that repayment of additional loans may
be harder. That increases the lenders' default rates - loans
that aren't repaid. Financial institutions will try very hard
to keep that default rate low. To do that, they sometimes deny
credit to borderline cases.
Meet all credit obligations and keep all borrowing to a
modest level for a long period of time. That makes you look
like a very good risk to loan officers, which means funding a
student loan will be a slam dunk.
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