Archive for February, 2010

How to Find the Best Student Loan Consolidation Program

Not all student loan consolidations are the same and finding the best student loan consolidation for your needs requires a little information and due diligence.  Each student loan consolidation company or institution will have different terms and qualifications, so just finding the best student loan consolidation rate might not be enough – you’ll need to find the best student loan consolidation program overall. . . . [Read More]

Consolidating Private Student Loans

As you near graduation, you’ll probably begin wondering about your student loans and how you’ll pay them off.  Here at Student Loan Consolidation Info, we are here to help by giving you the information you need to make student loan consolidation easy. . . . [Read More]

Eligibility for Federal Student Loan Consolidation

Most who’ve “been there, done that” would agree that the hardest part of securing a federal student loan debt consolidation is qualifying for it.  After that, the process is easy.  So to find out if you have eligibility for federal student loan consolidation, you’ll need the information required and to have your ducks in a row before you apply. . . . [Read More]

Tips for Consolidating Student Loans

If you’ve been in school for a couple of years or have recently graduated, you have likely begun receiving information on student loan consolidation.  Most students who are about to graduate to have just graduated are seriously thinking about student loan consolidation and how they can get the best deal.  For most, the only financial decision of greater import in their lives will be the purchase of a home.  Students loans, on average, total $20,000-$40,000 per student with many higher-level graduates’ loans being even higher. . . . [Read More]

Federal School Loan Consolidation

When students finish school, after having financed their education through federally-backed student loans, they are often faced with 5, 6, even 10 or more payments per month: one for each loan taken.  This is unwieldy from a bookkeeping and personal finance perspective, but there’s more to it than that too. . . . [Read More]