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Don’t pay for help with student loans

by by Lisa Lake Consumer Education Specialist, Federal Trade Commission

Don’t pay for help with student loans

If you have student loan debt, a program that promises to reduce or erase it might sound like just what you need. But some of these programs just take lots of your money and give you no help — or do only what you could have done easily by yourself.

In two just-filed lawsuits the FTC says that Student Advocates Team (SAT) and Manhattan Beach Venture (MBV) ran these kinds of illegal debt relief schemes. They allegedly charged people between $1,300 and $1,800 in fees and often steered them into taking out high-interest, multi-year loans from a finance company (Defendant Equitable Acceptance Corporation) to pay those fees. According to the lawsuits, SAT and MBV deceptively claimed they would get their customers’ loan payments permanently reduced or forgiven. They also misled people into believing that some or all of the fees would be used to pay off their student loans. Instead, SAT, MBV, and the finance company kept the fees.

You don’t have to pay for help with your student loans. There’s nothing a company can do for you that you can’t do yourself, for free. If you’re a federal borrower, start with StudentAid.gov/repay. If you’re a private borrower, start by talking with your loan servicer.

Here are some tips to avoid scams:

Spotted a student loan relief scam? Let us know about it. And for more resources on student loans, check out ftc.gov/StudentLoans.