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68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
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68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
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68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
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68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Perhaps you know this, but competition for ATC jobs is fierce, and you have to be less than 31 years old to even apply.
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68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
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0.029703
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.029703
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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34
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.051724
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1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
162831faf62f4cdfa193cd1621ae0f3a
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1,493,604,826
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187
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
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0.029703
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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34
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.051724
27,680
3.090909
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
162831faf62f4cdfa193cd1621ae0f3a
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1,493,604,826
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187
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.029703
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
162831faf62f4cdfa193cd1621ae0f3a
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1,493,604,826
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11
34
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.051724
40,062
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1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
162831faf62f4cdfa193cd1621ae0f3a
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1,493,604,826
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11
187
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.029703
40,751
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1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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34
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.051724
46,802
3.090909
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
162831faf62f4cdfa193cd1621ae0f3a
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1,493,604,826
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187
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.029703
49,013
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Perhaps you know this, but competition for ATC jobs is fierce, and you have to be less than 31 years old to even apply.
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50,549
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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11
34
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.051724
52,345
3.090909
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
162831faf62f4cdfa193cd1621ae0f3a
a11469e5291847f793b7efa41f1e9875
1,493,604,826
1,493,679,478
11
187
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.029703
74,652
17
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
c0763c1f25044e7fbc7317adbc082667
1,493,605,550
1,493,613,286
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
7,736
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
45dd4809e6b844a38471f07d7da62315
1,493,605,550
1,493,629,603
3
34
This was not well thought out.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.022727
24,053
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
152c49d3bf8c43c9bd1ebbbf9cc14a07
1,493,605,550
1,493,629,913
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
24,363
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
16004194ee314a2f8eb83c7c744473cf
1,493,605,550
1,493,630,277
3
6
This was not well thought out.
Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
0
0.071429
24,727
2
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
112ffc60262947348d2a846059721c8d
1,493,605,550
1,493,630,423
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
24,873
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
a1f1235425bd4608a9b4cdf33a900c2d
1,493,605,550
1,493,632,506
3
34
This was not well thought out.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.022727
26,956
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
ffac893d387d4a29beb41934d321fd42
1,493,605,550
1,493,636,053
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
30,503
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
5e6c95dc2a26490db47350f25defa01d
1,493,605,550
1,493,641,393
3
6
This was not well thought out.
Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
0
0.071429
35,843
2
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
0739e5fc0e444297b8895e5c4a816829
1,493,605,550
1,493,643,793
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
38,243
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
0482eb1127224190b238bcb090aa78ef
1,493,605,550
1,493,644,888
3
34
This was not well thought out.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.022727
39,338
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
982470b76f5a4494822700ef53eda875
1,493,605,550
1,493,645,577
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
40,027
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
691ef514108440578f882cbecc6d3d12
1,493,605,550
1,493,646,772
3
11
This was not well thought out.
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
0
0.052632
41,222
3.666667
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
8427e36a20ba49da9f7124cf768ee483
1,493,605,550
1,493,648,485
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
42,935
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
a072f16c622c43dab5ee1f743539fa83
1,493,605,550
1,493,651,628
3
34
This was not well thought out.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.022727
46,078
11.333333
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
862d4c01012c4c28a303f4cb9606f9e9
1,493,605,550
1,493,653,839
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
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62.333333
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
6353e7b4467040bda457987a9f2c2708
1,493,605,550
1,493,655,165
3
7
This was not well thought out.
End goal is air traffic control with the FAA, I majored in Air Traffic Management. Currently I work in the aviation field.
0
0.066667
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
698336b7f47042eab48bff90f5119a88
1,493,605,550
1,493,655,375
3
17
This was not well thought out.
Perhaps you know this, but competition for ATC jobs is fierce, and you have to be less than 31 years old to even apply.
0
0.083333
49,825
5.666667
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
2e8fb5d877c442f28fe1b095ab89c02a
1,493,605,550
1,493,655,471
3
5
This was not well thought out.
I know all of the details surrounding ATC. I appreciate it though!
0
0.125
49,921
1.666667
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
ee49f2a7c6744924a0969173524b3764
1,493,605,550
1,493,655,508
3
17
This was not well thought out.
Perhaps you know this, but competition for ATC jobs is fierce, and you have to be less than 31 years old to even apply.
0
0.083333
49,958
5.666667
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
7791a80cd4784fa5abbc18a4c6dcb90c
1,493,605,550
1,493,656,039
3
4
This was not well thought out.
Maybe try the airforce or something then? It could help you build real world experience for what you want.
0
0.083333
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
65f9030559ee4123bb4488f97d5198a2
1,493,605,550
1,493,656,370
3
5
This was not well thought out.
It's not a bad route if you are okay with the military lifestyle. I'm not really in a position to go that route with my current situation.
0
0.1
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
ac78a2c5d11e42babcb9c439bb79c673
1,493,605,550
1,493,657,171
3
34
This was not well thought out.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.022727
51,621
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
5e95ac5724454a29baecb43a58f5c38d
1,493,605,550
1,493,662,420
3
5
This was not well thought out.
Honestly, instead of sacrificing 3-4 years of your life to active duty, you're sacrificing 10-20 years (or more) to painful, protracted debt pay-off. You're not going to be able to buy a house or pay for a wedding with your fiancé. You're not going to be able to save for retirement or build a college fund for your children. Don't be so quick to brush off this option, it could completely change the course of your life. Five years from now, you could be out of the military, in a comfortable (even high-paying) civilian job, with no debt. I know that the military isn't for everyone, and of course it's your responsibility to manage your own life. Just be aware that you are choosing to sacrifice a lot by turning down an opportunity like this one.
0
0.018182
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
1004daee8ae5495cb6fb9f1c9ee2495b
1,493,605,550
1,493,663,080
3
34
This was not well thought out.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.022727
57,530
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
5a4b25831afb481e80150aa90f190439
1,493,605,550
1,493,665,274
3
4
This was not well thought out.
Well, if your mom ever becomes permanently disabled the 90k gets dismissed. You have that I guess... But yea I graduated from tech school at 23 with roughly $40k have been making regular (non IBR payments) and the loans really don't go down down unless I have extra cash and pay off individual loans. I'm 30 now, make about 60k a year and $360 a month still really sucks. Also $156 a month for a gym membership?! you could just set that money aside and buy a used piece of equipment every other month or so... Some stuff you can get for free.
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
51bc8624553248d6a9f8502895bd8689
1,493,605,550
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3
4
This was not well thought out.
Join the military. Try to get a commission with your degree. If you can't then enlist as Navy AC rate (air traffic control). I'm not sure about the other branches but the Navy can guarantee your job before you sign (as long as you pass the schooling). That will get you 3 things. Experience towards your future job, possible loan forgiveness after 10 years, a pay check. If you rank up quick can get a housing allowance and will get a pay increase too.
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0.02439
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d77c36db538c4b4892e8efd0819dea83
a11469e5291847f793b7efa41f1e9875
1,493,605,550
1,493,679,478
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187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
73,928
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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1,493,629,603
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I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
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0.121739
310
5.5
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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1,493,630,277
1,493,630,423
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187
Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
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0.076087
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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1,493,632,506
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Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.142857
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
16004194ee314a2f8eb83c7c744473cf
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1,493,630,277
1,493,636,053
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187
Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.076087
5,776
31.166667
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
16004194ee314a2f8eb83c7c744473cf
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1,493,630,277
1,493,644,888
6
34
Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.142857
14,611
5.666667
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
16004194ee314a2f8eb83c7c744473cf
982470b76f5a4494822700ef53eda875
1,493,630,277
1,493,645,577
6
187
Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.076087
15,300
31.166667
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
16004194ee314a2f8eb83c7c744473cf
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1,493,630,277
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Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
16004194ee314a2f8eb83c7c744473cf
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1,493,630,277
1,493,648,485
6
187
Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.076087
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31.166667
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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a072f16c622c43dab5ee1f743539fa83
1,493,630,277
1,493,651,628
6
34
Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.142857
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
16004194ee314a2f8eb83c7c744473cf
862d4c01012c4c28a303f4cb9606f9e9
1,493,630,277
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6
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Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
End goal is air traffic control with the FAA, I majored in Air Traffic Management. Currently I work in the aviation field.
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68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
Perhaps you know this, but competition for ATC jobs is fierce, and you have to be less than 31 years old to even apply.
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68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
16004194ee314a2f8eb83c7c744473cf
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1,493,630,277
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Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
16004194ee314a2f8eb83c7c744473cf
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1,493,630,277
1,493,679,478
6
187
Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.076087
49,201
31.166667
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.035714
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
ffac893d387d4a29beb41934d321fd42
1,493,630,710
1,493,636,053
3
187
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.052083
5,343
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
5e6c95dc2a26490db47350f25defa01d
1,493,630,710
1,493,641,393
3
6
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
0
0.037037
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
0739e5fc0e444297b8895e5c4a816829
1,493,630,710
1,493,643,793
3
187
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.052083
13,083
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
0482eb1127224190b238bcb090aa78ef
1,493,630,710
1,493,644,888
3
34
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.035714
14,178
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
982470b76f5a4494822700ef53eda875
1,493,630,710
1,493,645,577
3
187
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.052083
14,867
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
691ef514108440578f882cbecc6d3d12
1,493,630,710
1,493,646,772
3
11
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
0
0.064516
16,062
3.666667
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
8427e36a20ba49da9f7124cf768ee483
1,493,630,710
1,493,648,485
3
187
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.052083
17,775
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
a072f16c622c43dab5ee1f743539fa83
1,493,630,710
1,493,651,628
3
34
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.035714
20,918
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
3e9affb365bd42aba03ed6dace889ed8
1,493,630,710
1,493,653,634
3
4
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Quick question, what exactly is your field?
0
0.105263
22,924
1.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
862d4c01012c4c28a303f4cb9606f9e9
1,493,630,710
1,493,653,839
3
187
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.052083
23,129
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
1321dc94e6574c33813b1d819429deeb
1,493,630,710
1,493,654,475
3
4
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Quick question, what exactly is your field?
0
0.105263
23,765
1.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
eec5e1b3ff444b9fbd42631b3a0798ed
1,493,630,710
1,493,654,658
3
187
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.052083
23,948
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
6353e7b4467040bda457987a9f2c2708
1,493,630,710
1,493,655,165
3
7
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
End goal is air traffic control with the FAA, I majored in Air Traffic Management. Currently I work in the aviation field.
0
0.035714
24,455
2.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
698336b7f47042eab48bff90f5119a88
1,493,630,710
1,493,655,375
3
17
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Perhaps you know this, but competition for ATC jobs is fierce, and you have to be less than 31 years old to even apply.
0
0.04
24,665
5.666667
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
7791a80cd4784fa5abbc18a4c6dcb90c
1,493,630,710
1,493,656,039
3
4
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Maybe try the airforce or something then? It could help you build real world experience for what you want.
0
0.04
25,329
1.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
ac78a2c5d11e42babcb9c439bb79c673
1,493,630,710
1,493,657,171
3
34
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.035714
26,461
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
b72aebcdb0d241a9a40872385a6a09a6
1,493,630,710
1,493,657,430
3
4
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Quick question, what exactly is your field?
0
0.105263
26,720
1.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
bb33a4d4a2d44c8a86cc07121618d6f4
1,493,630,710
1,493,658,001
3
34
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.035714
27,291
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
5e95ac5724454a29baecb43a58f5c38d
1,493,630,710
1,493,662,420
3
5
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Honestly, instead of sacrificing 3-4 years of your life to active duty, you're sacrificing 10-20 years (or more) to painful, protracted debt pay-off. You're not going to be able to buy a house or pay for a wedding with your fiancé. You're not going to be able to save for retirement or build a college fund for your children. Don't be so quick to brush off this option, it could completely change the course of your life. Five years from now, you could be out of the military, in a comfortable (even high-paying) civilian job, with no debt. I know that the military isn't for everyone, and of course it's your responsibility to manage your own life. Just be aware that you are choosing to sacrifice a lot by turning down an opportunity like this one.
0
0.045455
31,710
1.666667
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
1004daee8ae5495cb6fb9f1c9ee2495b
1,493,630,710
1,493,663,080
3
34
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.035714
32,370
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
5a4b25831afb481e80150aa90f190439
1,493,630,710
1,493,665,274
3
4
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Well, if your mom ever becomes permanently disabled the 90k gets dismissed. You have that I guess... But yea I graduated from tech school at 23 with roughly $40k have been making regular (non IBR payments) and the loans really don't go down down unless I have extra cash and pay off individual loans. I'm 30 now, make about 60k a year and $360 a month still really sucks. Also $156 a month for a gym membership?! you could just set that money aside and buy a used piece of equipment every other month or so... Some stuff you can get for free.
0
0.066667
34,564
1.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
51bc8624553248d6a9f8502895bd8689
1,493,630,710
1,493,665,348
3
4
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Join the military. Try to get a commission with your degree. If you can't then enlist as Navy AC rate (air traffic control). I'm not sure about the other branches but the Navy can guarantee your job before you sign (as long as you pass the schooling). That will get you 3 things. Experience towards your future job, possible loan forgiveness after 10 years, a pay check. If you rank up quick can get a housing allowance and will get a pay increase too.
0
0.037736
34,638
1.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
d76c588b1e2a47d3baddc8014552999a
a11469e5291847f793b7efa41f1e9875
1,493,630,710
1,493,679,478
3
187
In addition to some of these great suggestions, is it possible to move back in with your parents? Realistically you should have done that while you were going to school as dorm fees are stupidly high, but we're beyond that now, so...
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.052083
48,768
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
a1f1235425bd4608a9b4cdf33a900c2d
ffac893d387d4a29beb41934d321fd42
1,493,632,506
1,493,636,053
34
187
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.121739
3,547
5.5
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
0d2c83dc07bf41f38421a64ece8f670c
ffac893d387d4a29beb41934d321fd42
1,493,634,633
1,493,636,053
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
1,420
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
0d2c83dc07bf41f38421a64ece8f670c
5e6c95dc2a26490db47350f25defa01d
1,493,634,633
1,493,641,393
3
6
This was not well thought out.
Two things: 1. Parent PLUS loans are not your loans, they are your Parent's. 2. You should look to get onto Income Based Repayment for your loans.
0
0.071429
6,760
2
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
0d2c83dc07bf41f38421a64ece8f670c
0739e5fc0e444297b8895e5c4a816829
1,493,634,633
1,493,643,793
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
9,160
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
0d2c83dc07bf41f38421a64ece8f670c
0482eb1127224190b238bcb090aa78ef
1,493,634,633
1,493,644,888
3
34
This was not well thought out.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.022727
10,255
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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1,493,645,577
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
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0.011494
10,944
62.333333
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
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691ef514108440578f882cbecc6d3d12
1,493,634,633
1,493,646,772
3
11
This was not well thought out.
Is the 120k debt just from undergrad? You mentioned the field you are in has about a 50k salary cap so I would assume it was just for an undergrad degree. Not trying to be critical but can you explain how you went 120k in debt from an undergrad degree? Did you go out of state for school?
0
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personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
0d2c83dc07bf41f38421a64ece8f670c
8427e36a20ba49da9f7124cf768ee483
1,493,634,633
1,493,648,485
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
13,852
62.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
0d2c83dc07bf41f38421a64ece8f670c
a072f16c622c43dab5ee1f743539fa83
1,493,634,633
1,493,651,628
3
34
This was not well thought out.
I see two ways out: **Option 1** Live as frugally as you can (no expensive cell, no expensive gym, no vacations) and job hop to increase your income and put as much money as possible towards your loans. **Option 2** Get a job that offers some sort of loan forgiveness program (ie, government) and pay the minimum. Stay there until your debt is wiped out. It's absolutely crazy your starting salary is 1/3 of your loans. Any way you slice it, you're tied up for a while.
0
0.022727
16,995
11.333333
1
personalfinance
68il3h
I'm about to turn 23 years old and I'm sitting on about 120k in student loan debt split between 30k federal unsubsidized and 90k in a parent plus loan in my mothers name. I currently pay about $175 on the federal and $635 on the parent plus per month on a 20 year extended graduated plan (the unsubsidized is not extended and is 10 years). Average interest rate is about 6% between all the loans. I currently have an annual salary of 35,000 in the field that I went to school for (entry level position, expect 5% increase annually in current position capping out around 50k). Obviously with promotions and whatnot I have higher income potential up to six figures, but that is years down the road. My question is, is it worth it to live down to the bare bones and pay as much as I can to my debt? Or should I pay minimums until I can realistically afford the extra payments? Current fixed monthly expenditures; Rent - $175 Car Insurance - $156 Gym Membership - $65 Pandora - $7 Cell Phone - $63 Is it realistically possible for me to make additional payments on top of my minimums? I appreciate the help guys, feels like I really screwed myself with the student loans.
I screwed up and now I have 120k in student loan debt.
0d2c83dc07bf41f38421a64ece8f670c
862d4c01012c4c28a303f4cb9606f9e9
1,493,634,633
1,493,653,839
3
187
This was not well thought out.
Here's the reality, as someone with close to as much student loan debt as you - If you don't pay it off, it doesn't get paid off. You are 23 years old, great - that is right when I graduated as well. I am 28 now, and paying the minimum and going on IBR has resulted in it barely moving down an inch. My private loan went down about....5k, and my federal one has gone up because I'm not servicing the interest. It's cute now, you can blame the systems, etc. But once you are approaching 30 and you have enormous loan payments to burn down, you will wish you had taken these loans are seriously as possible. There are lots of blogs of people with stories in similar situations. What they did to get out of them came down to 2 things, every single time. 1) Increase their income 2) Decrease their expenses They did this through a variety of lifestyle sacrifices. Whether that was having a strict food budget, having a 2nd job, moving back in with their parents. They had to do something to sacrifice and get an extra $1000 or more to throw on top of the minimum each month. If you do that, you can burn these down in 4-5 years. If you ignore them and let them grow, you will have barely moved them.
0
0.011494
19,206
62.333333
1