No.
If you have a good enough income to qualify since the student loan is considered your loan.
The other signer is responsible.
You may want to consider a federal student loan as these types do not require a cosigner.
As long as the loan is in force (until the loan is paid off)
No, a co-signer is legally and equally obligated until the loan is paid in full or until the loan is refinanced w/o the original co-signer being a party to the action.
You could get a federal student loan.
a co-signer can not be simply "substituted" . A new loan must be structered with the primary and the new co-signer, then the first loan would be paid off.
Hello I Am BinhPhan i have been searching for a co-signer to help me apply for an international student loan to study business administration in the UK or US and i don,t known how to get a co- signer andis it possible to get a loan without a co-signer. Thanks for your Gesture Michael
If you are on social security you should not be cosigning on a student loan. You would be guaranteeing that if the student doesn't pay off the loan you will. The federal government can garnish your social security benefits to recover student loan payments.
The options are limited. You must pay it off or refinance. You would have to get the bank to agree to a refinance with only you as the signer, if you qualify. Banks rarely remove a co-signer from obligations under a mortgage.
Depends on his age