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Paying for college with an installment plan

Many families will have to stretch and stretch to pay those pricey bills come August, which means lots of folks are in for a stressful, penny-pinching summer. But help is available.

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Behold the installment plan.

Graduate those payments
An installment plan lets you pay for a son or daughter's tuition with several payments over the course of a school year. Many plans allow monthly payments. Others allow up to three payments each semester.

"We think they're great," says Ray Loewe, president of College Money, a financial planning firm in Marlton, N.J. "You usually start paying for them as soon as you get accepted. You pay for college on a monthly basis. Most of the plans are interest-free."

However, the plans come with set up fees of $40 or $50.

Some colleges offer their own payment plans. Others use outside agencies.

An installment plan is a great option for families that have tried everything else. They've saved as much as they can. They've endured all the twists and turns of the financial aid process. And they're still coming up short.

Even with the help of some financial aid, they're really going to have to struggle to pay college costs. An installment plan can help by breaking down potentially budget-busting education bills into smaller and easier-to-manage payments.

"Some parents expected more financial aid than they're getting," says William Hastings, president of Academic Management Services, which offers payment plans at more than 1,200 schools nationwide.

"This is a way to pay out of current income instead of using savings."

Help for the financially handicapped
When it comes to paying for college, many families spread themselves thin. They manage to pay a mammoth tuition bill but wipe out their savings in the process. So car and house repairs and everything else get put on credit cards. When those get maxed out, they have to borrow from a 401(k) or take out a home equity loan.

"College is a tricky time for parents. A lot of them get into trouble because they tend to overdo things," Loewe says. "It spirals and it gets out of control."

An installment plan can help a family come to grips with college costs without piling up debt. Several smaller payments over the course of the school year are much easier on a family's budget. A $7,000 tuition bill doesn't seem as daunting when you spread it out over 10 months.

And after all the layoffs and stock market losses in the past year, what family couldn't use a financial breather?

Federal help for families
Families that can't handle the payments on an installment plan should consider taking out a federal loan.

Parents may borrow up to the full cost of a student's education minus any financial aid with a Parent Loan for Undergraduate Students (PLUS). These loans are government-sponsored and have a variable interest rate that is capped at 9 percent. PLUS loans will have an interest rate of 4.17 percent through June 30, 2005.

Families must pass a credit check to qualify for a PLUS loan. Monthly payments begin within 60 days of the loan disbursement.

Some families end up paying for college by combining a PLUS loan with an installment plan.

An online calculator on the Academic Management Services Web site called TuitionPlanner can help a family determine how much of an education bill to pay with an installment plan and how much to pay with a loan.

Affluent families may want to consider paying college bills with installment plans as well. Why cash out an investment to pay a bill when you can pay over time, interest-free?

"We encourage parents even if they have the money to take advantage of these plans," Loewe says. "Put the money in a money market account and earn interest on it."

 

Bankrate.com's corrections policy
-- Posted: April 8, 2005
 
 
More stories by Lucy Lazarony
 
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