Some respondents suggested allowing students to
borrow full cost of attendance instead of their parents.
Not exact matches
However, there are some cases where you can't
borrow enough federal loans to pay for the
full cost of attendance.
[6] Those limits are still in place for a subset
of loans (Stafford loans), but as
of 2006, graduate and professional students may
borrow above those limits up to the
full cost of attendance through the federal Grad PLUS loan program.
You can not
borrow the
full cost of college
attendance.
Once again, the federal alternative does not allow you to
borrow up to the
full cost of college
attendance.
Parents can
borrow up to the
full amount
of the estimated
cost of attendance.
A PLUS loan allows a parent to
borrow as much money (up to the
full cost of attendance) as needed to pay for a dependent child's higher education expenses, as long as they have good enough credit.
Borrowers receive a fixed interest rate
of 7 % with Grad PLUS loans, and they may
borrow up to the
full cost of attendance for fulfilling their graduate degree program, less any other financial aid received.
The PLUS loan is a parent loan that allows you to
borrow up to the
full cost of attendance, minus any aid received.
Discover undergraduate student loans allow you to
borrow anywhere from $ 1,000 up to the
full cost of attendance at your school, within aggregate loan limits.