As long it takes for you to pay it off, of course! Unfortunately, your credit history lives as long as you do. Once paid, the record has a postive connotation for life. Huzzah!
If the student loan is taken out in the name of the student then no. The student's credit score is separate from anyone else's. If the student loan is taken out in the name of the parent or with them as cosigner then yes - their credit scores would come into play.
The credit limit is the initial amount of your student loan. It helps keep your student loan from skewing your debt to credit ratio which can lower your credit score and make it more difficult to get credit.
any credit line that you have- credit card, car loan, mortgage and student loan
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yes
NO
Creditee is a the one who is having taken a loan or credit from the loan or credit provider
yes no maybe so depends on bad your credit actually is
In the USA, if the student loan is Federal like a Stafford or Perkins loan, then yes you can cosign with bad credit. If the student loan is a private student loan, then no, you must have good credit. Keep in mind, you should never take out private student loans out until you have used up Federal loans, grants, and scholarships. Private student loans have high interest rates and no benefits.
As long as loan stays current, credit & other obligations irrelevant.
If they have never taken out a loan, credit card, or anything else, there is no credit history. You should start building credit while in college - small credit cards and student loans are good ways.
I heard you can write off you student loan if you put it on your house/line of credit. But i thought you could do that anyway. Anyone know?