Hello fellow WCI's!
As my name alludes to, my wife is an MD; specifically a PGY1 in a Family Medicine program. We were married in May, situated nicely in-between Med school graduation and the beginning of residency. Ahhh, those were the days...
Anyways, we are sitting in our grace period for her loans, which will kick in come November. Her residency program has provided us with a financial adviser free of charge (which is cool), but I've met with him once and he's already pushing things like cash value life insurance (which is less cool). I decided to educate myself on our situation to understand what our best options were.
Here's the stats: I make around $95k/year, with no school loans. We purchased a house via Doctor Loan near her residency with ~$1000/mo mortgage (taxes & insurance included). Her resident salary is around $54k, but as she is only working July-December it will be approx. 25k this year. Last year she reported about $15k income from a research grant. She currently has "only" about $126k in Direct unsubsidized loans at about a 6.3% weighte average rate. We have no intention of any form of loan forgiveness; I want these loans gone in the next 6 years. After her 3 years in residency I anticipate a $160-200k income for her (not nearly as high as some of the other Drs here, but more than enough given our debt situation).
Our adviser suggested taking advantage of the federal interest subsidy with RePAYE, as they only take into account the previous year's tax returns when determining AGI. Since we were not married in 2016 and her income was below the poverty line, this should amount to a $0 monthly payment. If I'm reading things right, this will only be recalculated after 1 year (meaning November 2018) in which case we may want to change to PAYE or refinance. So instead of making payments on the loans between now and Nov 2018, our adviser suggested using my ally savings to dump what we would be paying, and then make a large payment before refinancing or switching to PAYE.
Does this sound like the correct strategy? We also could just bite the bullet and stay one RePAYE to avoid the capitalization, even though both of our incomes will be taken into account.
Thanks for the input!
As my name alludes to, my wife is an MD; specifically a PGY1 in a Family Medicine program. We were married in May, situated nicely in-between Med school graduation and the beginning of residency. Ahhh, those were the days...
Anyways, we are sitting in our grace period for her loans, which will kick in come November. Her residency program has provided us with a financial adviser free of charge (which is cool), but I've met with him once and he's already pushing things like cash value life insurance (which is less cool). I decided to educate myself on our situation to understand what our best options were.
Here's the stats: I make around $95k/year, with no school loans. We purchased a house via Doctor Loan near her residency with ~$1000/mo mortgage (taxes & insurance included). Her resident salary is around $54k, but as she is only working July-December it will be approx. 25k this year. Last year she reported about $15k income from a research grant. She currently has "only" about $126k in Direct unsubsidized loans at about a 6.3% weighte average rate. We have no intention of any form of loan forgiveness; I want these loans gone in the next 6 years. After her 3 years in residency I anticipate a $160-200k income for her (not nearly as high as some of the other Drs here, but more than enough given our debt situation).
Our adviser suggested taking advantage of the federal interest subsidy with RePAYE, as they only take into account the previous year's tax returns when determining AGI. Since we were not married in 2016 and her income was below the poverty line, this should amount to a $0 monthly payment. If I'm reading things right, this will only be recalculated after 1 year (meaning November 2018) in which case we may want to change to PAYE or refinance. So instead of making payments on the loans between now and Nov 2018, our adviser suggested using my ally savings to dump what we would be paying, and then make a large payment before refinancing or switching to PAYE.
Does this sound like the correct strategy? We also could just bite the bullet and stay one RePAYE to avoid the capitalization, even though both of our incomes will be taken into account.
Thanks for the input!
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