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- Dental Student
Hopin' said:I've been getting really worried about my loans. I haven't even started the school yet and getting worried about upcoming loans worth of about $300K.
Any help you guys wanna offer me to ease up my tension???
Appreciate you guys in advance...

diagnodent said:I'd look into the military for scholarships.
diagnodent said:I would be leary of 2k in loans per month. Thats a lot. How much do you expect to make right out. 8K per month equals at the most 5k after taxes. Minus 2k for student loans. You left with 3k per month for everything else and that won't even pay for my mortgage.
I'd look into the military for scholarships.
diagnodent said:I find it amusing that people who haven't attended dental school or graduated are able to comment on a question about loan amounts and repaying them. I'm just trying to be helpful and give advice. I know what the real world is all about.
Ok I'll go with you about not buying a house your first year out, but wouldn't you want to buy a house after year 1 to take the tax deduction. A mortgage of 250k is about a monthly payment of 2200. But as an associate your salary won't go up that much and you might make 120k as an associate. Just because you see the average salaries of 170k for dentists it doesn't mean you will automatically earn that much. Not everyone does, and thats why they are averages. Some make more and some make less.
If I had to do it all again for 300k in school debt I wouldn't do it without a military scholarship, thats all I'm saying. My debt coming out wasn't even close to that and am fine financially so I can afford a large mortage and the other fine things in life. But I know of many dentists who as soon as they get out of school start buying nice cars and spend too much money stupidly.
If you aren't going to go to the military, then the best thing to do would be to purchase a practice in an underserved area like Iowa, Kansas, etc and make good money from day one.
Just my 2 cents from an old sage.
diagnodent said:I find it amusing that people who haven't attended dental school or graduated are able to comment on a question about loan amounts and repaying them.
diagnodent said:You don't have to graduate school to be able to talk about paying back loans. However with all the mis-information about salaries on this board you just don't understand how little money you have the potential to earn. Those who haven't started paying loans off don't understand that 2k/month is a ton.
Everyone here seems to think they are going to have some million dollar practice and earn 300k per year and only work 4 days per week with 4 weeks vacation a year. Its not as easy as it looks. It takes many dentists years to earn over 120k.
I'm not trying to put anyone down or call anyone stupid, I just want you to understand that 300k in student loans is a lot.
And from a business point of view a dental student loan of 300k is a bad investment.
Its not like a house loan or a business loan where once the loan is paid off the property or business has appreciated.
If you are doing it b/c you have the potential to make good money then its a bad idea. To earn the big bucks you have to invest another 400-500k after school to purchase a practice. Then after 7 years of paying off that loan you finally make the big money. And just think you don't hit your peak earning year till you're 58. So if you want to retire early you will be missing your highest earning potential.
All I am saying is just think about it before you decide to take on 300k and have a plan to pay it off. Don't stay in a dead end associateship, don't wait more than 4 years to buy your first practice. Don't buy that practice in a saturated market.
diagnodent said:And from a business point of view a dental student loan of 300k is a bad investment.
Its not like a house loan or a business loan where once the loan is paid off the property or business has appreciated.
If you are doing it b/c you have the potential to make good money then its a bad idea. To earn the big bucks you have to invest another 400-500k after school to purchase a practice. Then after 7 years of paying off that loan you finally make the big money. And just think you don't hit your peak earning year till you're 58. So if you want to retire early you will be missing your highest earning potential.
All I am saying is just think about it before you decide to take on 300k and have a plan to pay it off. Don't stay in a dead end associateship, don't wait more than 4 years to buy your first practice. Don't buy that practice in a saturated market.
Mackchops said:If you're making 100k a year and you choose to live on only a third of that (a lot more than most students I know!), then you have 70k a year to go to your loans. Do this for three years and then buy the practice, the house, the car. You'll be making more money and, because you ate away at your principle so early you'll end up paying a WHOLE lot less in interest in the long run. Easier said then done, I assume but that's my "plan" and I think it's a pretty responsible one.
Mack
diagnodent said:And from a business point of view a dental student loan of 300k is a bad investment.
diagnodent said:but wouldn't you want to buy a house after year 1 to take the tax deduction.
Cold Front said:I disagree that $300K is a bad investment. For what you will get for that price, is priceless. Not to mention being respected as professional by others, creativity, flexibility, job security, and personal satisfaction.
12YearOldKid said:The flaw in your plan is that if you are making $100,000 you are not going to have $30,000 to live on and $70,000 to put towards loans. It will be more like
$30,000 to live on
$28,000 for state and federal taxes
$3000 for insurance and other professional expenses
$8 or 9,000 set aside for savings and investment
mdub said:This is probably the best site for quickly determining your after-tax income: http://www.paycheckcity.com/netpaycalc/netpaycalculator.asp
Hopin' said:I've been getting really worried about my loans. I haven't even started the school yet and getting worried about upcoming loans worth of about $300K.
Any help you guys wanna offer me to ease up my tension???
Appreciate you guys in advance...
mahya said:so if we assume some one that graduate by the year of 2010 and be hired as an assosicate for 100 K a year...the actual paycheck would be around 6 k a month and take 3k for the loans..you are left with only 3k to live with as a dentist..that is pretty harsh..but if the salary raises with the first two years..and I assume in the best case scenario a dentist buy a practice after 4 years he/she would be able to live moderately good but with all the debts I dont think a dentist would be able to make more than 8k a month!...(best case scenario))))
dentalman said:I don't remember if anyone has brought up consolidation. So, make sure you consolidate your goverment loans this year. This is the last year to do an in-school consolidation. They are changing the regulations next year. They are also changing Stafford loans to a fixed 6.8% (either next year or the year after), so it would be a no-brainer to consolidate now.
Mr.E said:Anyone out there who took out private students loans with less than perfect credit? What is your interest rate? I'm planning on taking out a private loan for the first year, and so far the interest rate is around 13%-14% without a cosigner. I'm wondering if anyone else is in the same situation?
coreyb said:You might check with your school to see if they've bargained deals for their students.
For example, at NYU, they've negotiated a deal with citibank for private loans. The % they got is Prime-1%.
coreyb said:You might check with your school to see if they've bargained deals for their students.
For example, at NYU, they've negotiated a deal with citibank for private loans. The % they got is Prime-1%.
Mr.E said:I'm planning on taking out a private loan for the first year, and so far the interest rate is around 13%-14% without a cosigner.
Cold Front said:Does this apply to 1st year students?
thanks
Mr.E said:Are you refering to the private loans that make up the difference between what is offered by Federal loans and what the school says is the limit on finacial aid? Or private loans that go directly to the borrower to help out with added expenses associated with school (i.e. loans like the Tuition Answer Loan offered by Salle Mae)? I found that the amount the school allows me to take out isn't sufficient to live on with a family, so I'll need aditional loans that do not limit the amount based on what the school dictates.
coreyb said:I wish it was 1% only!!! I'd be borrowing the most the law allows!!
GuidoPedo said:I consolidated all my loans form dental school at 2.87. Borrowers benefits: .25% reduction if you do direct withdrawal monthly to pay it, 1% if you pay 24 straight payments, another 0.5% reduction after 36 straight, and another 0.5% after 48.
So....after 4 straight years of payments, my loan of over 100K will be at the ripe interest rate of .62%![]()
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Gee, wonder if I'll take the full 30 years to pay it off!
coreyb said:NYU sent their budget out. It totaled 81.5K, 38.5 of which is federal loans. The remainder (81.5-38.5=43K) was private. I applied for the citibank/nyu loan for more than the 43K and I am 'conditionally approved'.
That's about all I know so far.
