Got Bad Credit? Student Loans Are Possible

by NDIMELE IKECHUKWU PHELIM

Even with bad credit, student loans are still a real option for achieving the necessary funds required to attend college and university programs that run for two and four years. Bad credit student loans are also useful for attending specific trade school courses.

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Complete Review on Student Loans

by Sarah Parker

If you are a student needing financial aid, one of the financial aids available to you is a student loan. In very simple terms, a student loan is a loan you take out and use to pay the costs of your college tuition. Compared to other types of loans, a student loan has a lower interest rates. While students loans can be privately sponsored, most student loans are government sponsored.

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Refinancing the mortgage

by Pooja Aggarwal

With the current market trends as they are as well as the shaky economy, many lending institutions are being flooded with customers wanting to refinance mortgage loans. Many mortgage loans are adjustable rate mortgages, meaning the interest on the mortgage fluctuates every time there is a change in the stock market. You can take out a mortgage thinking you’re paying an annual interest rate of 7% only to find out a year later that it’s increase to 9%. While this may seem like only a 2% increase, but not only may it increase your monthly payment, but it will also increase the balance that you owe on your mortgage. Many people are surprised, if not shocked, at the difference that 2% can make with a large mortgage and over a long period of time. This is a major reason why most people choose to refinance mortgage loans.

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Student Loans & Filing Bankruptcy

by William Blake

Most student loans that are given by governments and cannot be easily paid back may not always be paid off even if an individual files bankruptcy student loans. The only option open to such a defaulting student is proving considerable financial hardship, which is often quite difficult to prove. If you still want to file bankruptcy student loans, you need to prove that you are unable to pay off your student loan either according to repayment schedule, or in the coming years. Under these dire circumstances, you need to make what is called “good faith effort,” which means you will not lie to creditors regarding your financial situation, and that in spite of your best efforts, you still do not have enough funds to pay off your student loan.

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