chemgirl
Ideal_Rock
- Joined
- Sep 16, 2009
- Messages
- 2,345
suchende|1297648546|2851096 said:For what it's worth, going to law school in Canada could also put you six figures into debt: U of T tuition for 3 years would be over $60k, so if you had to take out full living expenses, books and fees on top of that it could push you into 6 figure territory as well. Not that I am defending the cost of a legal education in either country!chemgirl|1297638967|2850997 said:DH and I are looking for a house and we both had student loans. I suggest you speak to your lender before you make any decisions. Our bank told us exactly what to do to make us look more attractive for a mortgage. In our case, my government student loan has a low interest rate and doesn't show up as a negative. It is factored in to our monthly expenditures, but the total isn't taken in to account. On the other hand, DH's parents made too much so he didn't qualify for a government loan. He had to get a student bank loan instead. The total of that loan showed up on our records and the lender couldn't tell the different between DH's student loan and credit card debt. They advised us to pay off DH's student loans, but to make the minimum payment on mine. We used a chunk of our savings to pay off DH's loan and then saved for a downpayment.
We're in Canada though so things might be different in the US. Also, because we're in Canada our student loans were nowhere near 6 figures. I don't know if the monthly payments would be high enough to affect your ability to get a mortgage.
Not trying to sound harsh, but it is a rarity, not the norm, for Canadian students to build large student debt. My sister just graduated from law in Ontario in June and her tuition averaged a little over 10k per year. Books were really expensive for her program, but she graduated with much less than 6 figures of debt. She was barely eligible to lend 6 figures to begin with. When she started in 2007, TD would lend law students up to 20k per year. She could also get up to 21k in government loan over the course of her 3 year law degree. Medical school is closer to 20k per year in tuition though.
My sister did choose to pay off her loan before buying her house. Her loan was under $30k though so she managed to pay that fairly quickly once she started work last September.
ETA: I agree that its expensive in both countries, but still far higher in the states.
And don't get me started on engineering grad programs. The difference in price is shocking.
ETA again: Just looked up U of Toronto fees and they are almost double U of Ottawa fees. Wow, they have a good reputation, but I didn't think it was that different from other schools.