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How should I Choose a Student Loan?

Carefully.
Tags: student loans, paying for school
Apr 2, 2023

Table of Contents

  1. Overview
  2. Private vs Public Loans
  3. Which is right for you?
  4. Steps to choosing a law school loan

Once you have determined that you want/have to borrow to go to law school, there are a few things to consider. This process can feel overwhelming because of all of the lending specific terms that you may not have heard before. If you want to get a quick primer on (most) of the terms you will need to know, you can check out our Definition Page.  

There are a few decisions that you need to make when choosing a student loan for law school. For this article, we will break down the decisions that add up to a loan, as well as some options for finding one for you.

Aspects of a loan that you should think about:

  1. Private vs. Public
  2. Fixed vs. Variable Rate
  3. Terms Length 
  4. Cost (Fees & Interest Rate)

Private vs Public Loan for Law School

This decision will have more lasting effects than the other options. If you choose to take out private loans, you will not have access to federal loan programs, like PSLF, or the interest and payment relief that the federal government gave during COVID.

So how should you choose between private and public loans?

Public loans have 10-year terms and are fixed rate loans, and the rates are the same for everyone who qualifies. There are two types of public loans that are relevant to you as a law school student. 

First, Direct Unsubsidized loans. These are easy to qualify for and do not require a credit check. Unfortunately, they have a borrowing cap (in 2022 it is $20,500), so you might not be able to pay for all of your costs with these alone. The rates on these loans are low, but you do also have to pay an origination fee, which you should consider when comparing options. 

Next are Direct PLUS Loans. The interest rate and origination fees are higher on these loans than Direct Unsubsidized loans, but the rates are still pretty low. Qualifying for these loans is not guaranteed. 

Are public or private loans right for you?

Federal loans will (almost definitely) have better benefits than private loans. PSLF, IBR, REPAYE, potential loan forgiveness, to name a few. The one benefit private loans do have is that they will be discharged in bankruptcy, while federal loans will not (at least as of May 2022). 

Since federal loans have more benefits than private, we recommend following a decision tree to pick your loans. Below is one example, but not the only option. The important thing is to consider the short and long term costs of your loan, as well as the benefits (or potential benefits) the loan provides.

Steps to choosing a law school loan:

Step 1) Decide if you are going to have a cosigner for your loans. Some loans require a cosigner, and most will give you a better rate if you have one, especially if they have better credit than you.  

Step 2) Determine the cost of Federal Loans and if you will qualify for Grad PLUS. ‘Cost’ includes the interest rate and origination fees. Keep in mind that you will probably have to borrow two types of federal loans (Unsubsidized and Grad PLUS), so you might want to borrow both public and private loans to cover the total cost of attendance. You can find this year’s federal rates here: https://studentaid.gov/understand-aid/types/loans/interest-rates

Step 3) Determine the cost of Private Loan options. You should check as many lenders as possible to find the best option! If you are shopping around, consider looking for lenders that offer rate estimates with a soft credit check so you can shop with confidence knowing that your credit score won’t be affected. 

Step 4) If the cost of the public loans is lower than the cost of private loans, you should strongly consider stopping here and borrowing Federal loans. You will spend less and get better benefits. 

Step 5) If private loans are cheaper for you, then identify the public loan benefits that you might take advantage of. 

Step 6) Determine the dollar value that you think the benefits provide i.e. if you are 100% sure that you are going to go into big law, then you almost definitely won’t take advantage of IBR, so the benefits aren’t worth much, but if you are going to go into public interest and you won’t be making much, then you will probably get a lot of value from delaying full payments on your loans.

Step 7) Compare the savings you are getting from private loans to the potential value of federal benefits. Choose the loan that is best for you. 

Related Articles

  1. What is an Origination Fee? Plus Other Terms you Should Know when Borrowing for Law School.
  2. Oddly specific questions you might be asking when borrowing for law school.
  3. What Law School should I go to?
Windsor MIT '22, Harvard College Advisor

I am the half of LSD that didn't take the LSAT, or go to law school (Sorry about that). But I did go to MIT business school while surrounded by law students and lawyers, so I am somewhat qualified to talk about the intricacies of law school apps and finances.

Windsor (the dog) didn't write this but he WAS a Resident Tutor and career advisor at Harvard College with me, so deserves some credit.

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17:21
Or EMEA vacation in this example
17:22
i wish i had the money for a european vacation
you will once youre a federal atty
17:24
i plan to go in public interest, i wont have that kinda money lol
omg same
I also don't feel bad for Fulbrights. They'll be alright
17:24
i'll be lucky to afford a home lol
17:24
omg yess
International status generally being a debuff sucks tho for sure
LegalUsername
17:26
There are waitlist sessions for GULC? I never got one after receiving the SPWL.
LegalUsername
17:27
Or maybe it's because I got it yesterday?
SplitOnMe
17:27
yeah they happened a while ago
theres one for NU coming up
17:29
Georgetown waitlists 4000 people a year, they basically have to divvy the waitlistees up across multiple sessions over time
yeah I'll be logged into the NU one so they don't ding me for missing but no shot I'll actually be able to pay attention bc I'll be working
17:30
Imagine being the admissions staffer(s) who need to monitor Q&A for a 4,000 person zoom
USNWR needs to just bump schools back 20 places if they waitlist more than like 10% of apps
17:32
Penn Purge, the reprise
Everyone who was on the WL at the time got that invite but you might not have gotten it if you applied later
Re: GULC WL session
i didnt get it but i believe i received the wl notif after the email went out which like, fair
17:34
It *is* somewhat tricky to plan waitlists, because there are a whole bunch of subgroups you need there. Not just the stats you need to tune and needs people fill (URM, veteran, regional balance, international, STEM), but buckets like "These are the specific STEM majors we might take if we have a bunch of STEM majors go elsewhere, and we've locked down our GPA median, and we need to shore up our LSAT median, and our aid budget is almost exhausted so we need people that would accept a waitlist A with minimal aid (not the 180s)
17:38
And how much "padding" you need in your waitlist is inversely related to how patient applicants will be for that school (HYS can cover their bases with a small waitlist because most people on the list would drop everything and commit; Georgetown needs a large waitlist because a lot of people on their list will end up with better options)
17:38
But even understanding why schools do this, the result sucks for anyone on the WL
kimchi queen if you see this im sorry but i dont have the talent to paint birds on my nails and i have shaky hands today so i went with skittle nails
KimchiQueen
17:47
@manifestT14acceptances: Haha no need to apologize! Skittles and candy style nail art is super cute!
LegalUsername
17:48
Just praying for the WL gods now :(
trees1234567
17:49
Oh damn penn wtf sorry to everyone that got hit
@KimchiQueen: thank you i do like how they came out i always feel bad fielding suggestions and then doing something else
KimchiQueen
18:07
Suggestions can always be used next time! No need to feel bad :)
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