Direct Consolidation Loan is a federal loan that combines multiple eligible federal student loans into a single new loan under the U.S. Department of Education.
It simplifies repayment by creating one monthly payment.
Only federal loans are eligible for federal consolidation.
Direct Consolidation Loan:
Consolidation may allow borrowers with older federal loans to qualify for programs such as income-driven repayment or PSLF.
Interest is recalculated as a weighted average.
Direct Consolidation Loan pays off existing eligible federal loans and replaces them with one new Direct Loan.
Example: If a borrower has multiple loans with different interest rates, the new loan’s rate becomes the weighted average of those rates, rounded up to the nearest one-eighth percent.
The loan term may be extended depending on total balance.
Consolidation does not typically lower interest rates but may adjust repayment structure.
Direct Consolidation → Federal process, retains protections
Refinancing → Private process, may remove protections
Eligibility and benefits differ.
Does consolidation reduce interest rate?
The new rate is a weighted average, not usually lower.
Can private loans be included?
Federal consolidation applies only to federal loans.
Does consolidation affect forgiveness eligibility?
It may impact qualifying payment counts under certain programs.