Whenever you have the option to use subsidized loans, it’s probably an excellent choice (assuming it makes sense to borrow at all). But subsidized debt is only available in limited circumstances, and you may need to demonstrate financial need to qualify for these loans.
How Subsidized Loans Work
With subsidized loans, somebody pays your interest charges for you. When you borrow money, lenders typically charge interest on your loan balance, and you are required to pay those charges. For example, lenders may calculate interest costs every day or every month. Those charges can affect you in several ways: With subsidized loans, your loan balance does not increase when you skip payments, and any payments you make go toward reducing your loan balance. Any organization can subsidize a loan, and depending on the type of loan, it might be a government organization, a charity, or another group.
Examples of Subsidized Loans
Student loans are some of the most popular forms of subsidized loans. For example, students with subsidized Stafford Loans or Direct Subsidized Loans enjoy interest-free borrowing in several situations:
While enrolled in school at least half-time For the six-month grace period after leaving school During deferment
For those students, the U.S. Department of Education pays the interest costs on their loans.
How You Qualify
Subsidized loans are usually only offered to those who qualify. To qualify, you generally need to demonstrate financial need or meet other criteria.
Student Loans
Direct Subsidized Loans are only available undergraduate students with financial need. Graduate students and other students with sufficient financial resources don’t qualify for Direct Subsidized Loans. Instead, they may borrow with other (often unsubsidized) loans. To demonstrate financial need, apply for student aid using the FAFSA form. Depending on your finances and your need, you may qualify for aid. Your subsidized loans will be based on the cost of attendance at your school.
Home Loans
With certain housing loans like first-time homebuyer programs, you may need to live in a particular area and earn less than a specified dollar amount. Other restrictions might include the need for a purchased home to meet health and safety standards, and the need to limit the profits you can earn on the sale of your home. It’s best to borrow with subsidized loans whenever you have the option to do so. If you need more money, you can also borrow with unsubsidized debt. But only borrow what you really need—you’ll need to repay all of that money.
Options for Unsubsidized Student Loans
If you have loans that are not subsidized, you may have several options for handling interest charges. The choice you make affects the total amount you pay over your lifetime. It’s tempting to pay as little as possible every month, but that strategy may have significant consequences later in life.
Pay as You Go
The safest option, if you can afford it, is to pay interest charges as they hit your account. Doing so allows you to minimize your total debt—and it potentially helps with your monthly payment in future years. Paying interest charges each month also enables you to minimize the total cost of your education debt.
Capitalize Interest
You may be able to have interest charges added to your loan balance. Instead of making payments to cover the costs each month, you “borrow” more every time lenders apply interest charges. When you capitalize interest, your loan balance increases over time—even though you don’t receive additional funds—because you’re adding unpaid interest charges to your loan balance. While that approach seems easy to manage today, you end up with higher costs and higher monthly payments in the future. Read more about capitalizing interest on your loans.