Welcome to the Off-Shore Club

The #1 Social Engineering Project in the world since 2004 !

Important Notice:

✅UPGRADE YOUR ACCOUNT TODAY TO ACCESS ALL OFF-SHORE FORUMS✅

[New]Telegram Channel

In case our domain name changes, we advise you to subscribe to our new TG channel to always be aware of all events and updates -
https://t.me/rtmsechannel

OFF-SHORE Staff Announcement: Do NOT sell Drugs here AT ALL, in short we mean 1 Drug Post = Instant persistent ban on the legit network forums ! Want to know what it means, try and see !
Happy Hacking !


30% Bonus on ALL Wallet Deposit this week For example, if you deposit $1000, your RTM Balance will be $1000 + $300 advertising wallet that can be used to purchase eligible products and service on forums or request withdrawal. The limit deposit to get the 30% bonus is $10,000 for a $3000 Marketplace wallet balance Bonus.

Deposit Now and claim 30% more balance ! - BTC/LTC/XMR


Always use a Mixer to keep Maximum anonimity ! - BTC to BTC or BTC to XMR

How Much Do Federal Student Loan Servicers Make Per Loan?

Gold

Vitalik_Dark

Actual Genius
Verified Seller
Instructor
🚀 Crypto ₿OP Club
USDT(TRC-20)
$66,870.0
How much do federal student loan servicers make | Source: The College Investor

Source: The College Investor


Borrowers often believe that student loan servicers get to keep the interest on the loan. But it doesn’t work like that.

Servicing companies like MOHELA and Aidvantage collect payments of principal and interest on behalf of the loan holder (the Department of Education in the case of federal loans). In exchange, they're paid a monthly fee for each loan serviced.

So how much do federal student loan servicers make per loan? Below, we explain how their fees are determined and how that can impact the customer service and advice they offer.

How Loan Servicing Fees Are Determined​


There are two approaches to specifying how much federal student loan servicers make per loan. These are:

  • Percentage basis — A small percentage of the outstanding loan balance
  • Unit cost basis — A fixed dollar amount

Originally, federal loan servicers like Fedloan and Nelnet were paid a fixed percentage of the outstanding loan balance per year. 90 bp (0.90%) was typical. Since this fee is based on the loan balance, it would decrease as the loan was repaid.

Today, servicers are paid a fixed dollar amount per loan each month, regardless of the loan balance. The amount of the flat fee varies, depending on whether the loan is current or delinquent.

Unit Cost Basis​


Table #1, below, shows how much federal student loan servicers make each month. (The third column shows the annualized amount.) This table is based on the 2014 contracts for: Navient, Great Lakes, Nelnet, and PHEAA (Fedloan Servicing).

Typically, a contract is good for five years, but may be extended by the U.S. Department of Education.


Loan Status

Monthly Amount

Annualized Amount

In School

$1.05​

$12.60​

Grace Period

$1.68​

$20.16​

In Repayment

$2.85​

$34.20​

Deferment

$1.68​

$20.16​

Forbearance

$1.05​

$12.60​

Delinquent (6-30 Days)

$2.11​

$25.32​

Delinquent (31-90 Days)

$1.46​

$17.52​

Delinquent (91-150 Days)

$1.35​

$16.20​

Delinquent (151-270 Days)

$1.23​

$14.76​

Delinquent (270+ Days)

$0.45​

$5.40​

The loan servicers are also paid $27.35 per consolidation. When a loan is consolidated, the loan servicing usually is assigned to a different loan servicer. These servicing fees are somewhat different than in the 2009 contract, which as shown below in Table #2.


Loan Status

Monthly Amount

Annualized Amount

In School

$1.05​

$12.60​

Grace Period

$2.11​

$25.32​

In Repayment

$2.11​

$25.32​

Deferment

$2.07​

$24.84​

Forbearance

$2.07​

$24.84​

Delinquent (31-90 Days)

$1.62​

$19.44​

Delinquent (91-150 Days)

$1.50​

$18.00​

Delinquent (151-270 Days)

$1.37​

$16.44​

Delinquent (270+ Days)

$0.50​

$6.00​

The fees for borrowers in repayment were capped at 3 million borrowers. Beyond that limit, the fees were $1.90 per borrower per month. Similarly, the fees for borrowers in forbearance were capped at 1.6 million borrowers. Beyond that limit, the fees were $1.73 per borrower per month.

The 2011 contract for the not-for-profit loan servicers, which was last updated in 2019, have slightly higher fees, as shown in Table #3 below.


Loan Status

Monthly Amount

Annualized Amount

In School

$1.15​

$13.80​

Grace Period

$2.32​

$27.84​

In Repayment

$2.32​

$27.84​

Deferment

$2.28​

$27.36​

Forbearance

$2.28​

$27.36​

Delinquent (31-90 Days)

$1.78​

$21.36​

Delinquent (91-150 Days)

$1.65​

$19.80​

Delinquent (151-270 Days)

$1.51​

$18.12​

Delinquent (270+ Days)

$0.55​

$6.60​

Consequences Of The Fee Schedule​


If a borrower is current for the entire duration of a 10-year repayment plan, the loan servicer will receive $342.00 over the repayment term, plus $47.25 for the in-school period and $10.08 for the grace period. That’s a total of $399.33 per borrower.

If the borrower is current for the entire duration of a 25-year repayment plan, the loan servicer will receive $855.00 over the repayment term, plus $47.25 for the in-school period and $10.08 for the grace period. That’s a total of $912.33 per borrower.

Customer Service​


But how much do federal student loan servicers make if the borrower is late with a payment or in a deferment or forbearance? In that case, they get paid a lot less, potentially as little as $54.00 over a 10-year repayment term.

If a borrower is 271 or more days delinquent, the $0.45 servicing fee is not enough to cover the cost of a 5-minute call to the borrower or the postage for a letter to the borrower.

This is why loan servicers use a lot of automation. It also means that the servicing fees for borrowers who are current subsidize the cost of servicing the borrowers who are delinquent.

Repayment Recommendations​


Some borrower advocates have argued that there is an incentive for loan servicers to push forbearances over Income-Driven Repayment (IDR) since it takes less time to explain a forbearance. That idea may have certainly had merit in the past. In the 2011 contract, for example, you'll notice that servicers only received four cents more for loans "in repayment" than those in forbearance.

But under the most recent fee structure (shown in Table #1 above), a for-profit loan servicer earns more than 2.5 times as much per month from a borrower in an IDR plan. In fact, the current fee schedule pays more for almost every loan status than for a loan in forbearance (with the only exception being a borrower who is 270+ days delinquent).

The fee structure also provides loan servicers with a financial incentive to help borrowers who are delinquent back into good standing, since they get paid more for a borrower who is current than for a borrower who is delinquent.

Final Thoughts​


Loan servicers have a financial incentive to keep as many borrowers current as possible and to keep telephone calls as short as possible.

Loan servicers also have a financial incentive to keep borrowers in repayment for as long as possible. They'll earn more from a borrower who is in an extended repayment plan than from a borrower who is in a standard repayment plan. They earn the same monthly fee, but they earn it over a longer period of time.

Learn how to pick the best student loan repayment plan >>>




Editor: Robert Farrington

Reviewed by: Clint Proctor


The post How Much Do Federal Student Loan Servicers Make Per Loan? appeared first on The College Investor.
Full story here:
 

Create an account or login to comment

You must be a member in order to leave a comment

Create account

Create an account on our community. It's easy!

Log in

Already have an account? Log in here.

Friendly Disclaimer We do not host or store any files on our website except thread messages, most likely your DMCA content is being hosted on a third-party website and you need to contact them. Representatives of this site ("service") are not responsible for any content created by users and for accounts. The materials presented express only the opinions of their authors.
🚨 Do not get Ripped Off ! ⚖️ Deal with approved sellers or use RTM Escrow on Telegram
Gold
Mitalk.lat official Off Shore Club Chat


Gold

Panel Title #1

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.

Panel Title #2

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat.
Top