Private student loan interest rates remain stable for 5-year terms, drop for 10-year terms
During the week of Nov. 4, 2024, average private student loan rates remained the same for borrowers with credit scores of 720 or higher who used the Credible marketplace to take out 5-year variable-rate loans and dropped for 10-year fixed-rate loans. Here’s how it breaks down for the week:
- 10-year fixed rate: 7.81%, down from 7.95% last week, -0.14
- 5-year variable rate: 9.22%, the same as last week
This means, 10-year fixed private student loans interest rates dropped by 0.14 percentage points and remained stable for 5-year variable student loan interest rates. Through Credible, you can compare private student loan rates from multiple lenders.
Borrowers with good credit may find a lower rate with a private student loan than with some federal loans. For the 2024-25 academic school year, federal student loan rates will range from 6.53% to 9.08%. Private student loan rates for borrowers with good-to-excellent credit can be lower right now.
Because federal loans come with certain benefits, like access to income-driven repayment plans, you should always exhaust federal student loan options first before turning to private student loans to cover any funding gaps. Private lenders such as banks, credit unions, and online lenders provide private student loans. You can use private loans to pay for education costs and living expenses, which might not be covered by your federal education loans.
Interest rates and terms on private student loans can vary depending on your financial situation, credit history, and the lender you choose.
Who sets federal and private interest rates?
Congress sets federal student loan interest rates each year. These fixed interest rates depend on the type of federal loan you take out, your dependency status and your year in school.
Private student loan interest rates can be fixed or variable and depend on your credit, repayment term and other factors. As a general rule, the better your credit score, the lower your interest rate is likely to be.
You can compare rates from multiple student loan lenders using Credible.
An interest rate is a percentage of the loan periodically tacked onto your balance – essentially the cost of borrowing money. Interest is one way lenders can make money from loans. Your monthly payment often pays interest first, with the rest going to the amount you initially borrowed (the principal).
Getting a low interest rate could help you save money over the life of the loan and pay off your debt faster.
Here’s the difference between a fixed and variable rate:
- With a fixed rate, your monthly payment amount will stay the same over the course of your loan term.
- With a variable rate, your payments might rise or fall based on changing interest rates.
Comparison shopping for private student loan rates is easy when you use Credible.
Using a student loan interest calculator will help you estimate your monthly payments and the total amount you’ll owe over the life of your federal or private student loans.
Once you enter your information, you’ll be able to see what your estimated monthly payment will be, the total you’ll pay in interest over the life of the loan and the total amount you’ll pay back.