logo
How To Pay Down Your Student Loan Debt With Crypto

How To Pay Down Your Student Loan Debt With Crypto

Yahoo06-05-2025
Student loans have become a massive burden for millions of Americans. As of 2024, nearly 43 million borrowers owe a total of $1.77 trillion in student loans, with the majority being federal loans.
Be Aware: Coinbase Fees: Full Breakdown of How To Minimize Costs
Try This: The New Retirement Problem Boomers Are Facing
While traditional methods of repaying student loans involve using your income to make monthly payments, you can also use crypto to tackle debt. Here are two ways to pay down student loan debt with crypto.
Next, find out how you can pay your bills with cryptocurrency.
Take Out a DeFi Loan
DeFi, or decentralized finance, is a financial service that runs on blockchain networks, like ethereum (ETH). Unlike traditional banks, DeFi platforms don't rely on human approval. Instead, they use smart contracts to let people borrow, lend or earn interest on their digital assets.
So, how do DeFi loans work? Say you have $15,000 in student loan debt and own $30,000 worth of ETH. Since you don't want to sell your ETH because you think the price will go up over time, you can use a DeFi platform like Aave or MakerDAO to deposit your ETH as collateral and borrow $15,000 in stablecoins.
You can then convert the stablecoins into U.S. dollars and pay off your student loan debt. Once you repay the borrowed amount plus the interest, you get your ETH back.
However, most DeFi platforms will only let you borrow 50% to 70% of your collateral's value. This is called the Loan-to-Value (LTV) ratio. If the value of your crypto drops significantly, you may be liquidated, meaning the platform sells part of your digital asset to cover the loan.
Read Next: If Trump Eliminates the Department of Education, Do You Still Have To Pay Your Student Loans?
Pros
Lower interest rates: The first thing that makes DeFi loans attractive is the low interest rates and flexible repayment schedules. In some cases, borrowing rates are near zero.
No credit score required: Since these loans are issued via smart contracts and not by financial institutions, you don't need to have a good credit score. Your crypto acts as the collateral instead of your credit history.
Cons
While using DeFi loans to pay down student loans has advantages, it's not without risks.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump trying to make Powell ‘as miserable as possible': Haberman
Trump trying to make Powell ‘as miserable as possible': Haberman

Yahoo

time8 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Trump trying to make Powell ‘as miserable as possible': Haberman

President Trump is trying to make Jerome Powell's 'life as miserable as possible' as he ramps up pressure on the Federal Reserve chair to lower interest rates or leave the central bank, a reporter who has closely followed Trump asserted this week. 'I'm skeptical he will fire Powell — he might; obviously, anything is possible,' New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman said on CNN's 'The Source' late Thursday. 'But in the meantime, he is going to make his life as miserable as possible, or at least as miserable as the president perceives it could be, behaving this way.' Trump told reporters Friday morning that he does not plan to fire Powell but again criticized him for not adjusting interest rates. 'I think he's doing a terrible job,' Trump said before departing the White House for a trip to flood-ravaged Texas. 'I think we should be 3 points lower, interest rates. He's costing our country a lot of money.' 'We should be No. 1, and we're not, and that's because of Jerome Powell,' Trump added. Haberman said on CNN that she has heard names floated as a possible replacement for Powell. 'Always worth reminding people … the president appointed Jay Powell,' she said. 'This was not somebody who was imposed upon him. This was an appointee of his, previously.' The Supreme Court ruled in May that the Federal Reserve chair is protected from removal without cause. Top White House officials have since escalated attacks on Powell, focusing on the central bank's $2.5 billion office renovation and questioning his management. Trump's chief budget adviser Russell Vought publicly shared a letter Thursday that he penned to Powell implying that changes to the ongoing renovation of the 90-year-old Marriner S. Eccles Building, which serves as the Federal Reserve System headquarters in Washington, D.C., may violate the law. 'The Fed has been mismanaged,' Vought told reporters at the White House on Friday, calling the building renovations 'horrifying from a cost perspective.' Powell told senators in June that some of the elements that the National Capital Planning Commission approved in 2021 have been altered or have been mischaracterized in recent reports. 'There's no VIP dining room; there's no new marble — we took down the old marble, and we're putting it back up,' Powell testified, acknowledging that some segments of new marble were needed only to replace broken pieces. 'There are no new water features; there's no beehives, and there's no roof terrace gardens,' Powell continued. Vought on Friday compared the renovation work to France's extravagant Palace of Versailles. 'It probably would qualify as one of the eight wonders of the ancient world if you were able to go back that far,' he told reporters. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

EU to Extend Suspension of Countermeasures to Allow US Talks
EU to Extend Suspension of Countermeasures to Allow US Talks

Yahoo

time15 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

EU to Extend Suspension of Countermeasures to Allow US Talks

(Bloomberg) -- European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen said the European Union will extend the suspension of trade countermeasures against the US until Aug. 1 to allow for further talks after Donald Trump threatened a new 30% tariff rate against the bloc. Singer Akon's Failed Futuristic City in Senegal Ends Up a $1 Billion Resort Why Did Cars Get So Hard to See Out Of? How German Cities Are Rethinking Women's Safety — With Taxis Philadelphia Reaches Pact With Workers to End Garbage Strike The countermeasures, which the bloc had adopted in response to tariffs imposed by Trump on steel and aluminum, had been paused to allow for negotiations and were due to snap back into place at midnight on Tuesday. 'At the same time, we will continue to prepare further countermeasures so we are fully prepared,' von der Leyen told reporters in Brussels on Sunday, while reiterating the EU's preference for a 'negotiated solution.' The current list of countermeasures would hit about €21 billion ($24.5 billion) of US goods, while the EU has another one ready of about €72 billion. Von der Leyen also said that the EU's anti-coercion instrument, the bloc's most powerful trade tool, won't be used at this point. 'The ACI is created for extraordinary situations,' she said. 'We are not there yet.' German Chancellor Friedrich Merz on Sunday evening said 30% tariffs would hit exporters in Europe's largest economy 'to the core' if a negotiated solution in the trade conflict can't be found. Merz said he was coordinating closely with other leaders to ensure tariffs of such magnitude don't come into force. 'That requires two things: unity in the European Union and good lines of communication with the American president,' the conservative leader told ARD in an interview. Trump has sent out letters to various trading partners, tweaking tariff levels proposed in April and inviting them to further talks. In a letter published Saturday, the US president warned the EU it would face a 30% rate from next month if better terms can't be negotiated. The EU had sought to conclude a tentative deal with the US to stave off higher tariffs, but Trump's letter punctured recent optimism in Brussels over the prospects for an 11th-hour agreement. The bloc's ambassadors were scheduled to meet Sunday to discuss the situation. An extension of the suspension of countermeasures will need to be approved by member states. Cars and tariff levels on agriculture have emerged as key sticking points between the EU and the US, Bloomberg reported previously. The EU is seeking a tariff no higher than 10% on agricultural exports. An offset mechanism that some carmakers had pushed as a way to grant tariff relief to companies in return for investments in the US isn't under consideration for now, amid worries from the EU that it could shift production across the Atlantic. The bloc's negotiators are focusing talks on car tariffs instead, according to people familiar with the matter, who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private deliberations. --With assistance from Jorge Valero, Alberto Nardelli and Michael Nienaber. (Updates with Germany's Merz from sixth paragraph.) 'Our Goal Is to Get Their Money': Inside a Firm Charged With Scamming Writers for Millions Trump's Cuts Are Making Federal Data Disappear Soccer Players Are Being Seriously Overworked Will Trade War Make South India the Next Manufacturing Hub? Trade War? No Problem—If You Run a Trade School ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store