justginger
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- May 11, 2009
- Messages
- 3,712
Again, I'm asking advice from the clever financial minds of this board. As (some of) you know, I'm going back to uni this year!
I am going to try to explain how uni and the payment system works here, to get some advice from what others would do.
First, university tuition fees are capped by the Australian government, based on what discipline of study you are doing. For me, medical science is capped at about $27,000/year. This is how much you would pay if you were an overseas student. For citizens/permanent residents (like me), the government pays the vast majority of those fees for you, with your student contribution capped at $4,025/semester (for my discipline). That $8,050/year is what I am expected to pay for my full time studies.
Not only is that a fantastic deal, it gets better. You have the option of not paying that amount upfront, of having a loan from the government to pay FULL tuition, and you will pay it back through taxes when you earn over a threshold amount (I think it's about $50,000/year for 2013). There are incentives for people to either not do that (and pay their contribution up front in full) or pay it back quicker, in large chunks. You receive a 10% discount of the contribution amount if you either pay your full amount by the beginning of the semester (you only have to pay that semester, not the entire year) OR if you pay at least $500 by the beginning of the semester (so your $500 payment counts for $550, your $2000 payment counts for $2200, etc). After that point, any voluntary extra payments you make for $500 or more, you receive a 5% 'bonus' credit, making a $500 payment actually count for $525.
Now, as for having a standing loan amount. Say you pay nothing towards your contribution, so for the first year you have a debt of $8,050 to the Australian Federal Government. If you earn less than $50,000/year (which is possible, since I will be cutting down to part time), you do not HAVE to pay any of it. If you earn more than $50k/year, you will be making compulsory repayments in the form of a tax, on a sliding scale. The scale starts at 4%, and goes up to 8% if you earn over $92k. The amount withheld in taxes are direct repayments towards your standing loan.
Interest? There is none. Technically. However, the standing loan amount is adjusted once/year to account for inflation, according to the official Australian Taxation Office numbers. In the last three years, these amounts have varied between 2-3%. So basically, you're paying 2-3% interest once/year on what you haven't paid off.
Now. That's pretty low interest. The interest on my mortgage at the moment is around 6%. My bank account pays around 4.3%. So, what is the most financially savvy way to work this situation? Pay everything upfront just to get it all out of the way (no one likes messing about with loans) and get my full 10% discount? Pay nothing, keep the money in the mortgage, and then make a massive repayment right before the end of financial year (to avoid being charged 'interest' in the form of indexing)? Pay a bit at the beginning to get my 10% bonus, then make >$500 repayments through the year to get further 5% bonuses?
It would be nice to retain some of my savings for an emergency (without having to go into the mortgage offset account), so that is the only real reason I'm considering holding a debt instead of paying it all at once.
I'd love to hear everyone's opinions. I must fill out the paperwork that determines which way I proceed fairly soon, as classes start at the beginning of March.

I am going to try to explain how uni and the payment system works here, to get some advice from what others would do.
First, university tuition fees are capped by the Australian government, based on what discipline of study you are doing. For me, medical science is capped at about $27,000/year. This is how much you would pay if you were an overseas student. For citizens/permanent residents (like me), the government pays the vast majority of those fees for you, with your student contribution capped at $4,025/semester (for my discipline). That $8,050/year is what I am expected to pay for my full time studies.
Not only is that a fantastic deal, it gets better. You have the option of not paying that amount upfront, of having a loan from the government to pay FULL tuition, and you will pay it back through taxes when you earn over a threshold amount (I think it's about $50,000/year for 2013). There are incentives for people to either not do that (and pay their contribution up front in full) or pay it back quicker, in large chunks. You receive a 10% discount of the contribution amount if you either pay your full amount by the beginning of the semester (you only have to pay that semester, not the entire year) OR if you pay at least $500 by the beginning of the semester (so your $500 payment counts for $550, your $2000 payment counts for $2200, etc). After that point, any voluntary extra payments you make for $500 or more, you receive a 5% 'bonus' credit, making a $500 payment actually count for $525.
Now, as for having a standing loan amount. Say you pay nothing towards your contribution, so for the first year you have a debt of $8,050 to the Australian Federal Government. If you earn less than $50,000/year (which is possible, since I will be cutting down to part time), you do not HAVE to pay any of it. If you earn more than $50k/year, you will be making compulsory repayments in the form of a tax, on a sliding scale. The scale starts at 4%, and goes up to 8% if you earn over $92k. The amount withheld in taxes are direct repayments towards your standing loan.
Interest? There is none. Technically. However, the standing loan amount is adjusted once/year to account for inflation, according to the official Australian Taxation Office numbers. In the last three years, these amounts have varied between 2-3%. So basically, you're paying 2-3% interest once/year on what you haven't paid off.
Now. That's pretty low interest. The interest on my mortgage at the moment is around 6%. My bank account pays around 4.3%. So, what is the most financially savvy way to work this situation? Pay everything upfront just to get it all out of the way (no one likes messing about with loans) and get my full 10% discount? Pay nothing, keep the money in the mortgage, and then make a massive repayment right before the end of financial year (to avoid being charged 'interest' in the form of indexing)? Pay a bit at the beginning to get my 10% bonus, then make >$500 repayments through the year to get further 5% bonuses?
It would be nice to retain some of my savings for an emergency (without having to go into the mortgage offset account), so that is the only real reason I'm considering holding a debt instead of paying it all at once.
I'd love to hear everyone's opinions. I must fill out the paperwork that determines which way I proceed fairly soon, as classes start at the beginning of March.