Loan

Where can I get a student loan where I don't have to start paying it back until after I graduate?

I penury a student loan for about 15k-20k.
I don't want to have to start paying it back until after I graduate.
I also don't want the loan to have interest on it while I'm not paying.


The only way to get part of that consummate is through FAFSA go to fafsa.ed.gov and fill out the application.


The only way to get part of that gifted is through FAFSA go to fafsa.ed.gov and fill out the application.

CAN I GET A STUDENT LOAN WHERE THE MONEY GOES STRAIGHT TO ME?

I shortage a student loan so I can start a business. Any ways that I can work the system to where I then dont go to school, but still pay the money back later?


There are uncommunicative student loans that send the money directly to you, but you have to provide proof that you are going to school. So unless you have discipline certification then the answer is no.


No you would have to get a poor business loan or a private loan. You can't use a student loan with out going to school....
Any why would you? That takes money away from students who unquestionably do want to go to school..

Mike Polk Jr.'s Letters To His Student Loan Officer

Like so many underprivileged Americans I funded my college lore with student loans. And though it was the best 6 years of my soul, lately, my ...

where to get student loan - Bookshelf


The guerrilla guide to mastering student loan debt, everything you should know about negotiating the rignt loan for you, paying it off, protecting your financing future
336 pages
The guerrilla guide to mastering student loan debt, everything you should know about negotiating the rignt loan for you, paying it off, protecting your financing future


Bankrupt Your Student Loans, And Other Discharge Strategies
304 pages
Bankrupt Your Student Loans, And Other Discharge Strategies

In 1990, Congress extended the primeval fiveyear exception for discharging student loans to seven years23. At the same interval, the law was extended to apply ...

Graduation Debt, How to Manage Student Loans and Live Your Life
240 pages
Graduation Debt, How to Manage Student Loans and Live Your Life

This post is full of relevant information that is organized perfectly for someone who wants a precipitate but thorough understanding of how to repay student debt in ...

Untitled

I hate that I've been talking about nothing but school worries lately, but it's making me so anxious. I finally completed the student check-in today and got a total for my tuition. It's close to $7500 for the spring semester and that's not including textbooks. I haven't heard anything about my loan yet. Hopefully now that I have a total cost they'll get moving, but I'm still extremely nervous. What if it doesn't come through in time? What if I get denied? If something happens, Dad can't help me pay my tuition. I can't afford this without getting some sort of loan and I don't know where to go. If something happens, Dad can't help me pay for tuition. I can't get any financial aid this semester, my W-2s aren't here yet so I can't start on my FAFSA for next semester, it's just... frustrating and nerve-wracking. I feel like I don't have any support about this. Oh sure, people are supporting my journey to college, but I'm practically the only person I know who's made it this far in college. Out of all my family and friends, maybe two people have made it beyond community college. It's daunting. I don't feel like I have anyone to talk to about it because nobody else I know is doing this on their own. It's really scary, and a lot of it I was told from the beginning that I'll have to handle the issues, because I'm the legal age of an adult and it's my education. So when I'm worried about stuff, I talk to friends - who often don't have the same problems I have, as they have full scholarships or their parents or grandparents are taking care of their tuition. I don't have that kind of help. It's entirely up to me to take care of my own payments for loans and textbooks and everything else. But there's no need to panic. My W-2's aren't here yet either, and I know I have to get the FAFSA done, but as long as you can make some estimates (compared to last year's W-2s and stuff if this new W-2 comes really late) and turn them in, you are always free to go back and adjust them and they'll do the same for your financial aid. Financial aid departments can be really supportive, too, even with some people who have been through it all before. I wound up talking with a mother who worked in the financial aid department because I had some really confusing loan problems that I needed to get sorted out, and she said her daughter was always having issues with calculating aid and stuff. And I had to do this all without the help of my mother, because she's never done any of it before.