Parent and student loan comparison chart

Choose the loan that's right for you and your student

You can help your undergraduate student pay for college either by cosigning a Smart Option Student Loan® or taking out a Sallie Mae® Parent Loan in your name.

Both offer options for how you repay the loan, no origination fee, and can cover up to 100% of the school-certified cost of attendance at a degree-granting institution.footnote 1

Smart Option Student Loan® for Undergraduate Students

Sallie Mae Parent Loan

Your role

You cosign the loan and share the responsibility of paying it back with your student
You take the loan out in your own name and are responsible for paying it back

Primary borrower

Student
Any creditworthy adult (parent, guardian, spouse, relative, or friend)

Variable rate*

5.37% APR to 15.70% APRfootnote 2

3.37% APR to 12.99% APRfootnote 3

Fixed rate*

4.25% APR to 15.49% APRfootnote 2

5.49% APR to 13.87%footnote 3

Options for paying back the loan

  • No scheduled payments in school
  • $25 fixed monthly payments in schoolfootnote 4
  • Monthly interest payments in school; the interest rate will typically be 1 percentage point lower than with the deferred repayment optionfootnote 2
  • Monthly interest payments while a student is in school for up to 48 months, followed by monthly principal and interest payments for the remaining life of the loan
  • Monthly principal and interest payments through the life of the loan including while a student is enrolled in school

Principal and interest repayment term

10 - 15 years of principal & interest paymentsfootnote 4

10 years of principal & interest paymentsfootnote 5

Graduated Repayment Period availablefootnote 6

Yes
No

More features

*Lowest rates shown include the auto debit discountfootnote 7

Ready to apply?

Smart Option Student Loan for Undergraduate Students

For bachelor's and associate's degrees or a certificate at a degree-granting school.

Sallie Mae Parent Loan

For your student's bachelor's, associate's, or graduate degree, or a certificate at a degree-granting school.

Questions on which is the right loan for you?

Call us at 

877-279-7172

footnote Borrow responsibly
We encourage students and families to start with savings, grants, scholarships, and federal student loans to pay for college. Students and families should evaluate all anticipated monthly loan payments, and how much the student expects to earn in the future, before considering a private student loan. 

footnote Smart Option Student Loan:Sallie Mae loans are subject to credit approval, identity verification, signed loan documents, and school certification. This loan is available to students at participating schools and is not intended for students pursuing a graduate degree. Student or cosigner must meet the age of majority in their state of residence. Students who are not U.S. citizens or U.S. permanent residents must reside in the U.S., attend school in the U.S., apply with a creditworthy cosigner (who must be a U.S. citizen or U.S. permanent resident), and provide an unexpired government-issued photo ID. Requested loan amount must be at least $1,000. 

footnote Sallie Mae Parent Loan: This loan must be used to pay for eligible student expenses at participating degree-granting schools. The student cannot be a borrower or cosigner and is not responsible for repaying the loan. The borrower, cosigner, and student must be U.S. citizens or U.S. permanent residents. If the school issues a refund directly to the student, the borrower and cosigner (if applicable) are still responsible for repaying that amount. Applications are subject to a requested minimum loan amount of $1,000. Current credit and other eligibility criteria apply.

footnote 1. For applications submitted directly to Sallie Mae, loan amount cannot exceed the cost of attendance less financial aid received, as certified by the school. Applications submitted to Sallie Mae through a partner website may be subjected to a lower maximum loan request amount. Miscellaneous personal expenses (such as a laptop) may be included in the cost of attendance for students enrolled at least half-time.

footnote 2. Interest is charged starting when funds are sent to the school. With the Fixed and Deferred Repayment Options, the interest rate is higher than with the Interest Repayment Option and Unpaid Interest is added to the loan’s Current Principal at the end of the grace/separation period. Payments may be required during the grace/separation period depending on the repayment option selected. Variable rates may increase over the life of the loan. Advertised variable rates reflect the starting range of rates and may vary outside of that range over the life of the loan. Advertised APRs assume a $10,000 loan to a borrower who attends school for 4 years and has no prior Sallie Mae loans.

footnote 3. APRs for the Principal and Interest Repayment Option may be higher than APRs for the Interest Repayment Option. Variable rates may increase over the life of the loan. Advertised variable rates reflect the starting range of rates and may vary outside of that range over the life of the loan. APRs assume a $10,000 loan with a 4-year in-school period.

footnote 4.  Examples of typical costs for a $10,000 Smart Option Student Loan with the most common fixed rate, fixed repayment option, 6-month separation period, and two disbursements: For a borrower with no prior loans and a 4-year in-school period, it works out to a 10.28% fixed APR, 51 payments of $25.00, 119 payments of $182.67 and one payment of $121.71, for a Total Loan Cost of $23,134.44. For a borrower with $20,000 in prior loans and a 2-year in-school period, it works out to a 10.78% fixed APR, 27 payments of $25.00, 179 payments of $132.53 and one payment of $40.35 for a total loan cost of $24,438.22. Loans that are subject to a $50 minimum principal and interest payment amount may receive a loan term that is less than 10 years. A variable APR may increase over the life of the loan. A fixed APR will not.

footnote 5. Example of a typical transaction for a $10,000 Parent Loan with the most common variable rate, the Principal and Interest Repayment Option, 48-month in-school period, and two disbursements. It works out to 12.99% variable APR, 4 payments of $75.05, 115 payments of $151.38 and one payment of $80.65, for a total loan cost of $17,789.55. Loans that are subject to a $50 minimum principal and interest payment amount may receive a loan term that is less than 10 years. Variable rates may increase over the life of the loan.

footnote 6. GRP allows interest-only payments for the initial 12-month period of repayment when the loan would normally begin requiring full principal and interest payments or during the 12-month period after GRP request is granted, whichever is later. At the time of GRP request, the loan must be current. The borrower may request GRP only during the six billing periods immediately preceding and the twelve billing periods immediately after the loan would normally begin requiring full principal and interest payments. GRP does not extend the loan term. If approved for GRP, the Current Amount Due that is required to be paid each month after the GRP ends will be higher than it otherwise would have been without GRP, and the total loan cost will increase.

footnote 7. The borrower or cosigner must enroll in auto debit through Sallie Mae to receive a 0.25 percentage point interest rate reduction benefit. This benefit applies only during active repayment for as long as the Current Amount Due or Designated Amount is successfully withdrawn from the authorized bank account each month. It may be suspended during forbearance or deferment. 

footnote Sallie Mae loans are made by Sallie Mae Bank.

footnote Information advertised valid as of 6/21/2024.

footnote SALLIE MAE RESERVES THE RIGHT TO MODIFY OR DISCONTINUE PRODUCTS, SERVICES, AND BENEFITS AT ANY TIME WITHOUT NOTICE. CHECK SALLIEMAE.COM FOR THE MOST UP-TO-DATE PRODUCT INFORMATION.