yes and no but mainly no
Yes, company matches do count towards the limit.
Yes, employer match does count towards the 15 contribution limit for retirement accounts.
Yes, employer matching contributions do count towards the annual limit for a 403(b) retirement account.
The total amount of federal student loan money you can borrow in your lifetime.
If a student reaches their aggregate loan limit, they must pay down their loan first in order to be eligible for additional financial aid. Otherwise, the student will need to pay the remaining cost of school with cash out of pocket or take out a private loan.
Yes, company matches do count towards the limit.
No. Federal consolidation loans are still insured by the federal government, still show in the NSLDS, and still count toward the limit.
Yes, employer match does count towards the 15 contribution limit for retirement accounts.
Yes, employer matching contributions do count towards the annual limit for a 403(b) retirement account.
The total amount of federal student loan money you can borrow in your lifetime.
Aggregate loan limit is the max amount you can take out in student loans. It's like a credit card, if you max out the card, you have to pay down the principle balance before you can use that card again.
Aggregate is total limit for all claims in the year.
If a student reaches their aggregate loan limit, they must pay down their loan first in order to be eligible for additional financial aid. Otherwise, the student will need to pay the remaining cost of school with cash out of pocket or take out a private loan.
In the US the aggregate borrowing limit is ~138k. This includes undergrad and grad. Numerous additional stipulations and regulations apply. See fsa.ed.gov for more information.
In a insurance policy, the limit of liability is often expressed as a value per occurrence and a separate value as an aggregate limit. The policy will pay no more than the per occurrence limit for each covered occurrence Further, the pay no more than the aggregate limit for all claims during the policy period. On an insurance policy it would often be expressed as $1,000,000/$2,000,000 occurrence / aggregate The numbers listed above could be replaced by any other number, however the aggregate limit will never be less than the per occurrence limit. Alternatively, the limit could be split between per claim and aggregate instead of per occurrence and aggregate This has no effect on the meaning of aggregate in the policy. Mark Walters, ARM AAI West Insurance Group mwalters@westagy.com In a nutshell, aggregate means the total paid out for all incidents during the policy period. In the above example you could have 2 claims during the insured period for $1m each but not 3, as 3 x $1m is more than the aggregate limit.
Yes, browsing the web does contribute to your data limit, though not as much as downloads, video streaming, etc.
Your general liability policy contains three separate limits. A per occurrence limit (Max paid out for any one occurrence) Aggregate (Max pay out for multiple policies on claim) Products and completed ops aggregate (Can reduce amount paid for product or operations claims, to below the other aggregate limit or even the per occurrence limit. Lack of products and completed ops coverage can also be a problem which would show no product and completed ops limit. yes - there is a separate aggregate for products coverage and premises operations.