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Vanderbilt University School of Medicine. Financial Aid Information Vicky Cagle Director of Student Financial Services April 14, 2010. Financial Aid Applications . Available Jan. 1 Complete prior year tax returns FAFSA – Free Application for Federal Student Aid Need Access Application
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Vanderbilt University School of Medicine Financial Aid InformationVicky CagleDirector of Student Financial ServicesApril 14, 2010
Financial Aid Applications • Available Jan. 1 • Complete prior year tax returns • FAFSA – Free Application for Federal Student Aid • Need Access Application • Priority deadline March 15
FAFSA • Available on our website at https://medschool.vanderbilt.edu/financial-services/ or www.fafsa.gov • Required for federal loans • Student/spouse sections only • School code E00459 (separate from Vanderbilt University)
Need Access Application • Available on our website at https://medschool.vanderbilt.edu/financial-services/ or www.needaccess.org • Required of those applying for institutional need-based aid • Parental information required • First time Need Access applicants processing fee: $28 • Renewal applicants processing fee: $15
Financial Aid Award Letters • Mailed beginning April 15 • Identifies aid eligibility • Funds from various sources meet total cost of attendance.
Cost of Attendance • May include dependent child day care costs with documentation - only cost included for family • May not include credit card payments • May not include car payments • Federal regulations and applies to all schools
Budget • Have a budget and borrow less. • Do not borrow money just because you are eligible for it. • Borrow what you need, not what you want. • Decline loans that exceed your need. • “Live as a doctor now, and you will live as a student later.”
Types of Aid Available Scholarships Loans
Scholarships 100% have scholarships ranging from $2,000 - $65,000 • VMS Need-based Scholarships • VMS Non-need-based Scholarships • Other Scholarships
VMS Need-Based Scholarships • 31% of student body qualify • Ranges from $1,000 - $12,000 • Must complete the Need Access application and include parental info.
VMS Non-Need-Based Scholarships 100% of our students receive a minimum of $2,000—regardless of need. • Merit • Medical Scientist Training Program
Merit Scholarships • Awarded to 23% of our students • No application process • Every student that is invited is considered. • Offered shortly after invited • Phone call from one of the Deans and letter to follow • Awarded for all four years of study • Partial or Full Tuition
Medical Scientist Training ProgramMD/PhD Joint Degree • 10% of our students are accepted. • Funds cover tuition, fees, and a stipend for duration of program. • VMS and NIH funding
Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program • 1% participating • Tuition, fees, books, and stipend each year • Service requirement • Minimum obligation three years
Other Scholarships • 5% have secured • Miscellaneous organizations and foundations such as sororities, fraternities, and state agencies • Research on your own • Emails sent by our office of opportunities as they become available • Amounts vary
Loans 67% have loans ranging from $500 - $62,000 • Federal Loans • Private Loans • VMS Need-Based Loans
Federal Loans Federal Direct Subsidized Stafford Loans Federal Direct Unsubsidized Stafford Loans Federal Direct Graduate PLUS Loans
Federal Direct Subsidized Stafford Loan 67% of our students utilize these loans. • $8,500 maximum available per year • $65,500 maximum aggregate • 6.8% fixed interest rate • Interest-free while in school and grace • 6-month grace following graduation • 1% origination fee and an up-front interest rate rebate of .5%
Federal Direct Unsubsidized Stafford Loan 55% of our students utilize these loans. • $47,167 minus any amount received from Subsidized Stafford • $224,000 maximum aggregate combined subsidized and unsubsidized • Same terms as the Subsidized Stafford except interest accrues from time of disbursement • Interest capitalizes at repayment
Federal Direct Graduate PLUS Loan 16% of our students utilize these loans. • Maximum available per year: cost of attendance minus any other aid received • No aggregate limit • 8.5% fixed interest rate • Interest accrues from time of disbursement • 6-month grace following graduation • Origination fee of 4% and an up-front interest rate rebate of 1.5% • Credit check - can be denied based on poor credit. • If denied, may reapply with credit worthy cosigner. • www.annualcreditreport.com
Private Loan • Available to international students with a U.S. credit worthy cosigner. • Maximum available is the cost of attendance minus any other aid received. • Interest rates vary based on credit score. • Interest accrues from time of disbursement.
VMS Need-Based Loan • International students will be considered for these loans since they do not qualify for federal loans. • Must complete the Need Access application and include parental info. • 7% interest rate • Interest free while in school, 12-month grace, and three-year residency deferment
Options During Repayment During residency, there are two choices: • Postpone payments Grace Deferment Forbearance • Make payments Select a repayment plan
Postpone with Grace —a period of time following graduation when you are not required to make payments. • Most occur automatically; • Subsidized loans are interest-free to borrower during grace; • Unsubsidized loans continue to accrue interest. Availability and duration are based on type of loan.
Postpone with Deferment —a period of time when a borrower may postpone payments. • You must apply and meet criteria; • Subsidized loans are interest-free to borrower during deferment; • Unsubsidized loans continue to accrue interest. Residents generally no longer qualify for deferment of federal loans.
Postpone with Forbearance —a period of time when a borrower may postpone or reduce payments due to financial hardship. • Application required; • Used after grace and deferment; • Interest accrues and capitalizes on all loans. Medical residency forbearance – lender must grant.
Repayment Plans Determines payment amount and interest cost • Standard (Level) • Graduated • Income Sensitive Repayment • Extended • Income Based Repayment (IBR) May extend payments to as many as 25 years
Income Based Repayment (IBR) • Payment based primarily on household income. • Family size also taken into consideration. • Partial subsidy available for the first 3 years. • Must demonstrate a Partial Financial Hardship (PFH). • www.IBRinfo.org
Other Options Loan Repayment Programs Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program (PSLF)
Loan Repayment Programs —programs that repay your educational debt after you complete residency in return for a commitment of service. The National Health Service Corps (NHSC) at www.lrp.nih.gov The National Institute of Health (NIH) at www.nhsc.hrsa.gov/loanrepayment More programs listed at www.aamc.org/stloans
Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) —program that forgives the remaining balance due on your federal student loans. • Requires 120 payments to Direct Loans • Requires simultaneous work in public service • Does not have to be continuous work • Payments must be required (versus voluntary)
What is considered Public Service? • Non-profit, tax exempt, 501(c)(3) organizations • Federal, state or local government • Military service • Public not-for-profit schools and colleges
Average Total Indebtedness (including undergraduate debt) - Class of 2009 VMS range $8,500 - $254,500