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Student loan paperwork a potential nightmare
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Good records are especially important because some lenders sell student loans to other institutions, and while they're required to notify you of such transfers, the lender may be unable to track you down if you change your address often enough. At the end of the day, the burden of repayment is yours, whether you receive monthly bills or not.

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Sources of help
If you haven't kept paperwork from your lenders, or you just wish to double-check your student loan obligations, there are a few good sources that can help.

National Student Clearinghouse, a nonprofit group in Herndon, Va., offers a free online tool used by many financial aid counselors to help students track their loans and obtain lender contact information. Its "LoanLocator" only requires a Social Security number and date of birth.

Some 350 colleges and universities, including many larger state schools, also subscribe to EdFund.org, which provides to students a free, single-page snapshot of all their federal Direct, Stafford, Perkins and consolidation loans. The student loan debt summary does not include federal PLUS, institutional or private loans.

"Schools use our summary to let students know how much debt they've accumulated and what their estimated monthly payments will be," says Anita Kermes, manager of EdFund's Default Prevention Initiative unit. "They can send it up to four times a year to students, and borrowers can also log on to our Web site and query monthly."

You can get the same information by doing the digging yourself. The online National Student Loan Data System, offered through the U.S. Department of Education, provides a central database for federal student aid. The program receives data from schools, guaranty agencies, the Direct Loan program, the Pell Grant program and other government programs on all federal aid, including Stafford, Perkins, Direct and consolidation loans.

Facing the first payment
The biggest challenge for many borrowers, of course, is coming up with the cash.

As their grace period comes to an end, some recent grads find the monthly payments they agreed to four years ago are too much to handle -- especially if they remain unemployed. In those cases, Kermes says borrowers should contact their lenders immediately to arrange a payment schedule they can afford.

"A lot of students start getting their monthly student loan bills and it's like, 'Oh, my gosh, it's a minimum monthly payment of $400. How am I going to pay that?'" she says. "But it's not like a credit card bill. You have some options. You should call your lender and explore those repayment options."

Bank- or government-issued federal student loans, such as the Stafford, offer a variety of payment plans to meet the needs of borrowers. They include income-contingent or income-sensitive payments based on the borrower's income and total debt, graduated payments that slowly rise with your projected income, and an extended-pay plan where you stretch the term to lower the payments. Students can switch back and forth to suit their financial needs, sayes Kermes, and no prepayment penalties exist. The same repayment options and flexibility are available if you choose to consolidate your student loans.

 
 
NexT: "It's important to get your monthly checks in on time."
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