Toggle navigation
MBA Watch Logo
MBA Watch Sponsor
Stanford GSB | Mr. Anti W2
GRE 331, GPA 3.0
MIT Sloan | Ms. Sassy
GRE 329, GPA 3.46
Kellogg SOM | Mr. HealthAI
GMAT 700, GPA 3
MBA Watch Sponsor
Harvard | Mr. Global Consultant Leader
GMAT GMAT FE 705, GPA 7
INSEAD | Mr. SE To PM
GMAT 675, GPA 3.0
Harvard | Mr. Data Econ
GMAT 750, GPA 4
MBA Watch Sponsor
Harvard | Mr. Energetic Indian
GMAT 760, GPA 9
Stanford GSB | Ms. Multifaceted Desi
GRE 309, GPA 4
Tepper | Ms. MRI Gal
GRE N/A, GPA 3.3
MBA Watch Sponsor
Columbia | Ms. Big4 CPA To MBA
GMAT 730, GPA 3.69
Cornell Johnson | Ms. Indonesian Tech
GMAT 740, GPA 3.02
Stanford GSB | Mr. IB To TFA
GMAT 750, GPA 3.4
MBA Watch Sponsor
NYU Stern | Ms. CA – Controller
GRE 321, GPA 8
Chicago Booth | Ms. Low GPA High Impact Care
GMAT 685, GPA 2.56
Columbia | Mr. CRMprofff
GMAT 760, GPA 3
MBA Watch Sponsor
PQ Logo
Featured Schools
Auburn Herbert College of Business logo
UVA Darden Logo 440 x 200 University of Virginia
IESE Business School logo 440 x 200
IE Business School Logo Horizontal 440 x 200
Indiana Kelley School of Business
Today's Featured Schools
Featured Schools
Auburn Herbert College of Business logo
UVA Darden Logo 440 x 200 University of Virginia
IESE Business School logo 440 x 200
IE Business School Logo Horizontal 440 x 200
Indiana Kelley School of Business
  • Home
  • Main Menu
  • Most Recent
  • This Week’s Most Viewed
  • GMAT Master
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Events
  • Study In UK
  • Special Reports
Rankings
  • MBA
  • Online MBA
  • Specialized Masters
  • Entrepreneurship
  • Executive MBA
  • Undergraduate Business Schools
News & Features
  • All Business School News
  • MBA
  • International MBA News
  • Online MBA
  • Specialized Masters
  • Admissions
Inside Business Education
  • THE Register
  • Thought Leadership
MBA
  • School Profiles
  • Rankings
  • News
  • Jobs
  • Faculty & Leadership
  • Best 40 Under 40 Professors
  • Events
Students
  • News & Features
  • Meet The Class
  • Best & Brightest MBAs
  • Best & Brightest Online MBAs
  • Women In Business School
Careers & Pay
  • News, Advice, & Trends
Online MBA
  • News & Advice
  • School Profiles
  • Rankings
  • Events
Masters Degrees in Business
  • News & Advice
  • Specialized Masters Directory
  • Rankings
  • Business Analytics
  • Master's In Management
  • Events
Financing
  • Financing Your Degree
Study IN Series
  • Study In France
  • Study In UK
Admissions
  • News & Advice
  • Admissions Consultant Directory
  • Your MBA Game Plan
  • Admissions Gateway
  • Getting Into HBS, GSB, & Wharton
  • Handicapping Your MBA Odds
  • MBA Watch
  • Events
GMAT & GRE
  • News & Advice
  • GMAT Master
More Resources
  • FREE: Insider Guides
  • FREE: Successful Essays To The GSB & HBS
  • Special Reports
Events
Videos
Podcasts
Executive MBA
Undergrad
Full Archive

About | Privacy Policy | Advertising| Editorial | Contact Us

Follow Us

Subscribe | Login

  1. Home
  2. MBA
  3. Juno
  4. How To Decide Between Federal And Private Student Loans

How To Decide Between Federal And Private Student Loans

by: Nikhil Agarwal, Co-Founder of Juno on April 13, 2022 | 650 Views
April 13, 2022
    • Copy Link
    • Share on Facebook
    • Share on Twitter
    • Email
    • Share on LinkedIn
    • Share on WhatsApp
    • Share on Reddit

 

My name is Nikhil Agarwal. I graduated from Harvard Business School in 2020 and have helped thousands of students with more than $500 million of student loans over the last three years through Juno, an organization that negotiates the lowest rates for MBA student loans. 

Read on to learn more and decide if federal, private, or a mix of federal and private student loans are the best fit for your MBA student loans. 

The TL;DR Version

Reasons to Select Federal Loans

You are pursuing a career that would make you eligible for Public Service Loan Forgiveness, or you may need to utilize an income-driven repayment plan. I recommend reading more about these benefits on the government website before deciding to go down this path.

OR

Your creditworthiness makes you ineligible for a private student loan, or the private student loan rates are more expensive than your federal student loan options.

Reasons To Select Private Student Loans

You want to pay the least amount of interest possible, and your private student loan option is more affordable than both the federal Direct Unsubsidized Loan and the federal Grad PLUS Loan.

Note: For almost all MBA Juno members, the negotiated rates are expected to beat the federal Grad PLUS Loan rates. For a majority of MBA Juno members, the negotiated rates are expected to beat the Direct Unsubsidized Loan rates as well.

Reasons to Use a Mix of Federal and Private Loans

You want to pay the least amount of interest possible, and your private student loan quote is better than the Grad PLUS loan rates but worse than the Direct Unsubsidized Loan rates.

OR

You believe President Biden may forgive student loans (we’re not sure it’s going to happen, and here’s why) and want to ensure you have at least some amount of federal loans ($10,000 to $20,000) so you can take advantage of the forgiveness program.

In-Depth Version

There are important differences between private and federal student loans. Remember that you can choose to use private, federal or some combination of both to finance your education.

Private Student Loans

Private student loans are offered by private banks and lenders. To get these loans, students must apply directly through the lender’s website. We encourage you to utilize Juno, as we offer negotiated private student loan options through which you can get lower rates than you would if you went directly to the lender.

How Are Private Loan Interest Rates Set? 

Every private lender has its own unique underwriting process and standards for student loan applicants. These eligibility requirements help lenders decide whether to give an applicant a loan and at what interest rate. 

As part of the loan application process, lenders will conduct a credit check to evaluate your ability to repay and how risky you are. If you have a credit score in the high 600s, you will likely qualify for a loan. The higher your score is, the better the rate you are offered. Lenders consider other factors such as your debt-to-income ratio, income, and your co-signer’s credit score as well.

After you apply and are approved for a private student loan, you will usually get to choose between multiple options, including the following:

  • Variable or fixed interest rates
  • Loan term (also known as the repayment term)
  • Repayment plan

You can read this article on making the best choice for your budget. Different options typically have different interest rates so it’s smart to compare all the choices.

Federal Student Loans

Federal student loans are offered by the federal government.

While there are many types of federal student loans, domestic MBA students can typically access Direct Unsubsidized Loans (up to $20,500), and Direct PLUS Loans, also known as Grad PLUS Loans (up to the cost of attendance minus any other financial aid you receive). Most applicants qualify, and the rates are the same for all eligible students.

How Are Federal Loan Interest Rates Set? 

All federal student loan interest rates and fees are set by Congress on July 1 of each year and remain fixed for the life of the loan. Students who need financial aid apply for loans each academic year, and rates differ from academic year to year (meaning that when you graduate, each loan for each year of school likely has a different interest rate).

Note that for the upcoming year, we expect the rates to be higher than the current ones. For loans disbursed after July 1, 2022, and before July 1, 2023, the interest rates and fees are as follows:

 

Direct Unsubsidized (Federal) Direct PLUS (Federal) Juno Partners (Private)
Maximum Loan Amount $20,500 Up to the cost of attendance minus other aid received  Up to the cost of attendance minus other aid received 
Interest Rate 6.54% until July 1, 2022 7.54% until July 1, 2023 Will vary based on creditworthiness; starts at 3.24%
Origination Fee* 1.057% 4.228% 0

These rates and fees are set each academic year and take effect on July 1.

*Origination fees vary slightly based on when you take out your loan in the school year. The fee is updated every year for loans disbursed on or after Oct. 1, meaning that if you borrow the same amount of money each semester, your origination fee will likely be different. Fees for loans after Oct. 1, 2022, have not been determined yet.

Steps To Decide The Best Option For You

Step 1: Get Quotes from Juno (and Other Private Student Loan Options)

Some lenders will allow you to get a quote using a soft credit check; others will ask you to get a hard credit check. The impact of a hard credit check is minimal. Therefore, we recommend getting your quotes regardless of whether the lender offers a soft credit check option.

Among the places you shop around, we encourage you to include Juno. As I mentioned earlier, Juno works to negotiate lower rates for MBA students and has been the most popular option for MBA student loans for a few years now. Further, Juno has a generous guarantee program that ensures the negotiated option will be lower than anything you can find yourself outside Juno.

Step 2: Compare Federal Loans and Your Best Private Options

Once you have your quotes, you can compare them to your federal loan options. There are two factors that make the process slightly more complicated than comparing only the interest rates:

  1. Federal loans have origination fees.
  2. Private loans have a variety of repayment options.

Both these factors move the needle in favor of private student loans. Therefore, you can use the following process.

First, look at a private student loan with the following options:

  1. 7-year term or 10-year loan term
  2. Fixed interest rate
  3. Fully deferred repayment plan ($0 per month while in school) or $25 per month in school

We are using that selection because it is most similar to the terms of a federal student loan on the standard repayment plan.

Now, you can use this calculator (make a copy of the Google Sheet and fill out the yellow cells) to ensure that you are accounting for the origination fee. The results in the gray cell will give you your cost-optimal loan selection.

Remember to compare the costs and the other benefits and protections. Federal loans are great if you are pursuing a career that would make you eligible for Public Service Loan Forgiveness or if you may need to utilize an income-driven repayment plan.

That’s it! I hope I was able to help you decide if federal loans or private loans are a better fit for you. I promise that this is my last plug for Juno. I’m immensely proud of the options we’ve negotiated for MBA students and would love to see you take advantage of them.

Let me know if you have any questions. You can email me at hello@joinjuno.com.


Nikhil Agarwal is a co-founder of Juno. He started Juno in 2018 to negotiate a group discount for student loans and has since successfully grown the business to help students with over $400M of loans. He has an MBA from Harvard and a bachelors in Aerospace Engineering from University of Illinois – Urbana Champaign.

Trending
Tagged: federal student loans, MBA student loans, student loans

Post navigation

Previous Article: Choosing Between Fixed And Variable Interest Rate Loans
Next Article: A Guide To MBA Student Loans
  • Stay Informed. Sign Up! Login
    Logout
    Search for:
  • What Matters? And What More? 50 Successful Essays To The GSB & HBS
  • Specialized Masters Program Directory Business Analytics Hub MBA Admissions Consultant Directory Online MBA Hub Home Assess My MBA Odds
  • This Weeks Most Viewed
    • Meet Virginia Darden’s MBA Class Of 2026 (3,800 views)
    • The 100 Best & Brightest MBAs: Class Of 2025 (2,976 views)
    • Poets&Quant’s 2024-2025 MBA Ranking: For The First Time Ever, Kellogg Takes First (2,618 views)
    • Meet UCLA Anderson’s MBA Class Of 2026 (2,480 views)
    • PitchBook’s 2024 Top Universities Ranked By Startup Founders (1,374 views)
  • PQ Consultant Directory PQ Consultant Directory

Our Partner Sites: Poets&Quants for Execs | Poets&Quants for Undergrads | Tipping the Scales | We See Genius

About Poets&Quants | P&Q News Archives | Privacy Policy | Advertising & Partnerships | Editorial | Contact Us | Sign In / Register

Copyright© 2025 C Change Media, LLC All Rights Reserved.

Website Design By: Yellowfarmstudios.com