Welcome guest, please Login or Register

   

How much of my subsidized accruing interest does the government pay for me monthly?

Rank
Rank

Total Posts: 4

Joined 2014-01-07

PM

 

I have a single lender that has loans for me where some are Direct Stafford, some are FFEL Stafford, some are subsidized and some are unsubsidized, and a mix of each for every year I borrowed.

I noticed in some of my loans that there has been over a year’s worth of subsidized interest payments made by the government, all going to interest, and like .01 or .02 cents going to principal each month. I have qualified for IBR every year since graduating, and for the year in question I literally had $0 min payment. Plus once each year, a large amount of interest capitalizes, according to my lender, when I reapply for IBR approval.

Once my income increased and I started having a substantial minimum payment (still under IBR) and I began making an actual payment to these loans, I noticed my interest that is accruing each month has tripled over what the govt was paying in interest.

For example, for all of 2013, the gvt paid roughly $25 in interest payments (per subsidized loan), and my balances never changed.
When I started paying payments in 2014, the portion going to interest has been like anywhere from $80 to $100 a month on those same loans and only a few dollars goes to principal.

So, my question is, how much of my monthly interest did the govt pay per month…was it 30% or 25%, and is that why I still had a good size amount of interest capitalize each year - because the govt did not pay ALL of the subsidized interest per month?

Or was my capitalized interest likely only my unsubsidized interest? Im confused.

Thanks!

Rank
Rank

Total Posts: 8

Joined 2012-07-20

PM

 

As I understand it the government only pays the interest on subsidized loans while your in school, during your grace period, or while you’re in deferment.

Rank
Rank

Total Posts: 4

Joined 2014-01-07

PM

 

Well, yes, that’s what all the websites say. I did find this information: that if your IBR payment is not enough to cover monthly interest, the government pays the difference for the first three years of IBR. http://www.ibrinfo.org/what.vp.html

But that is exactly why I am confused. While I had $0 minimum payment IBR, the govt paid $25 or so in interest for me each month and the balance never changed until once a year, a large amount capitalized. Then when I had an income increase, and my IBR minimum became $150, then the interest I have to pay is now like $100. So why the $75 difference in interest per month now that I am paying it?