very much, because your burdens are less by atleast 1.
Yes
Not sure who "they" are...but they can use all legal means to collect what you swore you would pay.
Federal student loans have no statute of limitation, meaning they can collect forever. The can garnish your wages without taking you to court, take your tax refund, and sue you in court for property and bank accounts. Student loans are also almost impossible to discharge in bankruptcy. There are people now who did not repay their student loans from the 1970s who are having their social security garnished. Not paying is a very bad idea.
No they check on that.
The only way to make student loans go away is to pay them off. Recent changes in bankruptcy laws makes it almost impossible for student loans to be discharged in a bankruptcy filing. Or simply avoid students loans, check out the Related Link.
Yes, Federal student loans can be garnished in every state.If you need help getting out of default, or getting a garnishment lifted, then contact Default Management Services, Inc. for help. You can Google the name for a phone #. Ask for Doug, he is knowledgeable.
It can be garnished by the federal government. Federal student loans, IRS debt, ect. Also if you owe back child support or alimony payments, it can be garnished. However, it cannot be garnished by regular creditors.
Not if he did not cosign on the loans.
Yes
If the loans are federally guaranteed then yes they can be garnished. If you need help with the consolidation of your defaulted loans, click on the default link below.
no
yes and no
It depends on what the money is owed for. Your check can and will be garnished if you owe money for child support, back taxes, student loans, owe money the state you live in. Other than that, no, regardless if you're in prison or not.
Government Guaranteed or isnured ones, yes.
Not sure who "they" are...but they can use all legal means to collect what you swore you would pay.
Yes, if you paid off a Defaulted student loan and don't have any other defaulted student loans, then you are eligible to get new Federally Guaranteed student loans.
Absolutely not. You know that phrase "there are no stupid questions"? It's a lie.