Consolidation vs. Refinancing: What’s the Difference?
As mentioned, a Direct Consolidation Loan is for federal student loans, but you may have loans from private lenders as well. While it’s sometimes called private loan consolidation, the process of combining and streamlining payments on private student loans is more accurately called refinancing.
Consolidation and refinancing help you do a similar thing—pay off multiple old loans with a single new one—but there are some key differences between the two options:
Issuer: A Direct Consolidation Loan is a federal student loan offered to consolidate federal student loans; meanwhile, refinancing is generally offered by private lenders and can incorporate both federal and private loans.2 Some states offer refinancing as well.3
Purpose: A Direct Consolidation Loan is meant to combine your loans for easier repayment. Refinancing can do this too, but its main purpose is to offer savings on interest rates.
Interest rate: Again, a Direct Consolidation Loan has an interest rate that’s the weighted average of your current loans. A refinanced loan might have a fixed or variable interest rate that’s lower than your current rate, which could lead to monthly and long-term savings.
Benefits: Since the Direct Consolidation Loan is a federal loan, it comes with some distinct advantages, such as forgiveness, forbearance, deferment and income-based repayment programs. Depending on the lender, refinanced loans from private lenders might come with some perks of their own, but generally do not have all of the same protections as federal loans.