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Can a child get a student loan at 17?


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My upcoming senior will be 17 when he heads off to college and I never thought of student loans and age requirements before. Will be be able to get a student loan if he isn't 18?

 

Ohmmmmm.......tsk tsk. I might have to report you to the LLNOE crew. :D

 

Seriously, does he NEED loans? Can't he qualify for grants? Work some? I am sooooo against student loans after reading and listening to DR for so long.

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Ohmmmmm.......tsk tsk. I might have to report you to the LLNOE crew. :D

 

Seriously, does he NEED loans? Can't he qualify for grants? Work some? I am sooooo against student loans after reading and listening to DR for so long.

 

I agree. My husband and I both went to college using pell grants and working on the college work study program. The only thing my parents had to pay for was the books. The pell grants and work study program paid for everything else.

 

As a side note the work study program is how I met my husband. We were both assigned to work in the college library the first semester of our freshman year. This is how we met. We both spent four years working for the college library. After college we got married and have been happily married for 23 years. So thank goodness for work study programs.

 

Blessings

 

Zoraida

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My kids are paying their own way through school as we aren't in a position to help them and are not able to co-sign either. My oldest son got enough grants and scholarships that he wont have to any loans.

 

The son I was asking about in the OP is going to go to the community college and get his AS then transfer to the University for his BS. He should get some grants, but I don't know if it will cover all his tution thus the need for a loan. He turns 17 this August and wants to graduate early and start full time at the CC in January.

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My financial aid/scholarship package in undergraduate school required a small student loan portion. What I cannot remember is whether my parents cosigned--I was 17 at the time. But I did a little googling. Jean, you might find this site to be useful.

 

Good luck to your son.

 

Jane

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I agree. My husband and I both went to college using pell grants and working on the college work study program. The only thing my parents had to pay for was the books. The pell grants and work study program paid for everything else.

 

This is great if the parent's income is low enough, but not for most people. I had loans which I wasn't able to finish paying off until I was 35 (that did include graduate school).

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A college education is an appreciating asset, like a house, so within reason (just as with a house), I don't see any difference between borrowing to buy a house and borrowing to pay for an education. The problem comes when one "overbuys" by, for example, borrowing every cent to go to, say, Vanderbilt, to get a degree that will pay $30,000/year. A recent college graduate will have a hard time paying for a $70,000 education on a teacher's salary, but if the student had chosen a reasonably-priced state school, borrowed some, worked for some, and graduated owing just $20,000, that's certainly doable without extreme hardship.

 

I know that wasn't the original question, but I know everyone is richer for havng my 2 cents on the topic. ;)

 

Terri

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Jean,

 

I can tell you a bit about what we were offered and did in order to do that. We did the FAFSA and the colleges where dd got accepted all sent us a financial package based in part on that form. She was offered different things incl. free grants (mostly due to her ACT-score and some because they wanted her), study work (which differes a bit from place to place, but basically means the student is guaranteed that much work to pay off college), and different student loans plus the parents were offered a loan at a formidable rate.

 

As for the student loans then they also differed. Some places she got offered the federal subsudized loan which meant no interest till 6 months after graduation (or was it unsubsidized which meant with interest?), anyways she got offered without interest due to our FAFSA. She also was offered different loans at different colleges which did carry interest. The kid is 16. I am not sure at all if they wanted co-signment but I believe you can read about that on the different websites of the colleges. I sort of think they would not require the parents' signature because she just mailed it a rejection of such a loan and only her signature was required (we decided to carry the loan on our credit card and hopefully pay it off before there are interests).

 

Was this any help? Always apply for FAFSA as early in the fiscal year as possible.

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Thanks, Nadia! He is thinking of going in Januaury so I think I need to do the FASFA soon because I wouldn't have 2009 taxes yet. We are going to meet with his advisor ( he is taking a few classes this fall, as a senior) and plan out which route is best for him.

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Yeah, do the FAFSA and then apply for the college, assuming it's rolling admission or something and see what they offer. Has he taken any standardized tests? Dd did ok on SAT, but really well on ACT which was the reason for several of her offers.

 

ANyways, if he is going cc first, then he might very well be able to pay off his loans as they occur with private jobs (higer paying, I think). It sounds as if he is off to a really great start and has a very high work-ethic. It'll work out.

 

Nadia

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This is great if the parent's income is low enough, but not for most people. I had loans which I wasn't able to finish paying off until I was 35 (that did include graduate school).

 

If your parents don't or can't help you with your college expenses you can fill out some forms that show you are not being supported by them...even for the first year, when you might have been on their taxes for the last year...I cannot think of the right terms here, but some sort of 'exception'.

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A college education is an appreciating asset, like a house, so within reason (just as with a house), I don't see any difference between borrowing to buy a house and borrowing to pay for an education. The problem comes when one "overbuys" by, for example, borrowing every cent to go to, say, Vanderbilt, to get a degree that will pay $30,000/year. A recent college graduate will have a hard time paying for a $70,000 education on a teacher's salary, but if the student had chosen a reasonably-priced state school, borrowed some, worked for some, and graduated owing just $20,000, that's certainly doable without extreme hardship.

 

I know that wasn't the original question, but I know everyone is richer for havng my 2 cents on the topic. ;)

 

Terri

 

I've already gotten one neg rep for veering off topic on this thread, but hey, I asked Jean directly and she said she didn't mind... so here is more of my 2 cents...:)

 

I do agree that overbuying school is a huge problem. However, I also believe with all my heart that people, especially kids with no responsibilites like a house and family CAN come out of college with no loans. I think as with all credit in our society, it is just too easily available and too favorably looked upon.

 

And as far as comparing it to a house...well, DR doesn't advise buying a house until you have enough of a down payment to finance only 15 yr and keep your payment under 25% of your net pay.

 

Jean I am sure he will find a job and it is so great your kids are taking such an active role in getting themselves through college. Good for him!

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My kids are paying their own way through school as we aren't in a position to help them and are not able to co-sign either. My oldest son got enough grants and scholarships that he wont have to any loans.

 

The son I was asking about in the OP is going to go to the community college and get his AS then transfer to the University for his BS. He should get some grants, but I don't know if it will cover all his tution thus the need for a loan. He turns 17 this August and wants to graduate early and start full time at the CC in January.

 

If you can't pay for college, he could qualify for merit aid.

 

If he's doing an associates' degree first, it will be easy for him to work part-time and cover that tuition, at least, if he's still living at home and you're feeding him. CCs rarely cost more than $6k a year, fulltime. Clearing $6/hr, that'd be half-time year round. He could always work fulltime over the summers and less during the school year, or he could earn a few thousand toward his bachelor's by working FT during the summer and HT during the year.

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This is great if the parent's income is low enough, but not for most people. I had loans which I wasn't able to finish paying off until I was 35 (that did include graduate school).

 

Just and an FYI... If you're careful with your grad school, you can make sure you'll have an assistantship, even if you're not qualified for a fellowship, in most majors. (Not business school, law, or med school, of course.) Grad school doesn't have to cost anything--even at a very good school.

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If he's doing an associates' degree first, it will be easy for him to work part-time and cover that tuition, at least, if he's still living at home and you're feeding him. CCs rarely cost more than $6k a year, fulltime. Clearing $6/hr, that'd be half-time year round. He could always work fulltime over the summers and less during the school year, or he could earn a few thousand toward his bachelor's by working FT during the summer and HT during the year.

 

He just got hired yesterday for a PT job! He is thrilled and he is thinking of doing something like you said. Work PT during the school year and FT summers to pay his AS degree in cash. He can transfer to the U his junior and senior years and have very little, if any loans.

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He just got hired yesterday for a PT job! He is thrilled and he is thinking of doing something like you said. Work PT during the school year and FT summers to pay his AS degree in cash. He can transfer to the U his junior and senior years and have very little, if any loans.

 

Very cool!

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He just got hired yesterday for a PT job! He is thrilled and he is thinking of doing something like you said. Work PT during the school year and FT summers to pay his AS degree in cash. He can transfer to the U his junior and senior years and have very little, if any loans.

 

Cool! If it's an average state school ($-wise) and he's going to live at home even his last two years, he'll likely have no more than $14k to pay off altogether for the last years. Without aid and with what he can save from the job during the first two years, that would leave about $10k left, which is manageable, again, in two years with jobs. With whatever need-based scholarship he can get, he should be fine!

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