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Home » I spent 20 years and nearly $100,000 paying off my student loans. I’m done just in time for my youngest to start college.
I spent 20 years and nearly 0,000 paying off my student loans. I’m done just in time for my youngest to start college.
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I spent 20 years and nearly $100,000 paying off my student loans. I’m done just in time for my youngest to start college.

News RoomBy News RoomMay 19, 20263 ViewsNo Comments

The year was 2006. Pluto had just been downgraded to a dwarf planet. I was obsessed with my Motorola Pebl flip phone and iPod. It was also the year I started paying down my student loan balance after completing my MBA.

For 20 years, this student loan was a constant in my life, a staple of my monthly budget. It was older than my youngest child, and it was tied to a career I left in 2023.

Finally paying it off in 2026 was a moment that I couldn’t even fathom in 2006.

I was told I need to go to grad school to get a promotion

After earning my bachelor’s degree, I landed an entry-level communications job at a large public company. I was young and determined — a single mom making about $30,000.

After a year, that salary increased to around $36,000, but I was eager to get promoted and make even more money.

A manager gave me some advice: I would need a master’s degree to have any hope of moving up. I listened and started grad school in 2003.

The loans quickly added up

Three years later, I had my MBA and a bill for over $69,000. This was the combined total of my $20,000 in unsubsidized undergrad and over $49,000 subsidized grad-school loans.

At the time, that was a terrifying amount. After all, it was more money than I had ever made in a year.

But that manager was right. Getting my MBA was the key to getting promoted, which happened in 2006 when I landed a new job with a better title at a new company. My salary and bonuses greatly increased.

For almost 20 years, I made that monthly payment

The amount of my payment that applied to interest varied greatly over the 20 years it took to repay my debt.

I had a standard consolidated 30-year loan. My first loan payment was in December of 2006, and the automatic payments I set up would continue until November of 2036. Every single month, $345.19 was deducted from my checking account.

The first two payments went entirely toward interest, which was hard to stomach. Over the years that shifted to about 50/50 principal and interest, and then the interest got lower and lower.

I eventually started paying more than the minimum amount

When my oldest son graduated from college in 2022, and I was no longer giving him money for school, I was able to make extra payments and put a portion of my annual bonuses toward my loan repayment. I was determined not to be paying my student loans into my mid-50s.

I paid off the loan in early 2026. Rather than the estimated $108,000, the total amount paid was $98,442.88. It worked out to be $69,928.46 in principal and $28,514.52 in interest.

For more on student loan debt

I didn’t realize how freeing it would be to pay off these loans

My life changed enormously in the 20 years I had been paying off my student loans. I had another child. I got promotions, changed companies, and helped my son and three stepchildren get through college, all while paying my own student loans.

I made a career change in 2023 and walked away from marketing and Corporate America — the reason I had gone to grad school in the first place. But every monthly student loan payment was a reminder of the investment I made in a career I no longer wanted. Some days, I felt irresponsible, paying for this degree I wasn’t really using anymore.

And now, two major life changes — my youngest graduating from high school and my husband retiring — are giving me more time and headspace to do something in addition to being a travel writer, the job I left my marketing career for a few years ago. Yes, I’m considering adding some more lines to my résumé.

I celebrated this milestone with my youngest over coffee

A few days after making that final payment, I received an email from the lender congratulating me that my student loan was paid off.

That was the moment it sank in. This thing that had been a constant in my life for over 20 years — through a second child, promotions, writing a book, even making a career change — is now done.

Paying off my student loans freed me from feeling an obligation to a career path I no longer want to pursue. Finally, my thoughts about what I want to do next changed.

Celebrating over coffee with my youngest, they shared what they think I should do next: teach. I might give that a try.

Time will tell what this next chapter will bring, but I’m glad my student loans won’t be following me.



Read the full article here

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