Close Menu
  • Home
  • Recent News
  • Global & National News Updates
  • Business & Finance Insights
  • Technology & Innovation Trends
  • More
    • Health, Wellness & Lifestyle
    • Entertainment & Celebrity Buzz
    • Sports Highlights & Live Scores
  • Privacy Policy
What's Hot

Michael Carrick: Bio, Tactics, Statics, and What to Expect

January 14, 2026

Dominik Szoboszlai makes it 2-0 to Liverpool but it's all about this sublime Mohamed Salah assist

February 14, 2026

Marcus Rashford could return to Man United after Amorim sack

January 6, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Global Hublet Friday, March 20
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Home
  • Home
  • Recent News

    Things Have Gotten Much More Severe Than We Imagined: The Pitt Creator Breaks Down That Timely ICE Episode

    March 20, 2026

    Jos Christians solidify bond with Muslims, share food during Ramadan

    March 20, 2026

    Taylor Frankie Paul Breaks Silence on Bachelorette Cancelation: I Am a …

    March 20, 2026

    Iyabo Ojo is scamming her fans? Actress speaks about online scandal

    March 20, 2026

    The Duggar Familys History of Sex Scandals: How Is It Tied to Their Bizarre Belief …

    March 20, 2026
  • Global & National News Updates
  • Business & Finance Insights
  • Technology & Innovation Trends
  • More
    • Health, Wellness & Lifestyle
    • Entertainment & Celebrity Buzz
    • Sports Highlights & Live Scores
  • Privacy Policy
Home»Global & National News Updates»Considering student loans? Heres how borrowers paid theirs off in less than a decade
Global & National News Updates

Considering student loans? Heres how borrowers paid theirs off in less than a decade

AdminBy AdminDecember 28, 2025Updated:December 29, 2025No Comments5 Mins Read

Managing and paying off student loans can be a miserable, decades-long slog that forces some borrowers to put off major milestones — such as buying a house or a new car — for years. Sometimes forever.

While the data still shows that people who have graduated from college consistently make more money, on average, than people who have not, some students have questioned whether the potential benefits are worth the cost and the hassle.

In a recent report, theWall Street Journalspoke to a handful of borrowers who managed to pay off their student debt within a decade. Their stories are their own — everyone who borrows is different. Borrowers all face different circumstances, have access to different resources, and have different priorities and ambitions. One size does not fit all.

With that disclaimer in mind, the stories and strategies of those who have managed to pay back their loans have been collected here to hopefully provide some perspective and advice to prospective borrowers, though some of the tools they used no longer exist.

In Arizona, a 35-year-old woman named Lauren Braley managed to pay down her student loans — approximately $125,000 — in seven years.

The average federal student loan balance is approximately $40,000. While it takes some borrowers decades to pay it off, with luck, work, and intention others have managed to repay their loans in under 10 years

The average federal student loan balance is approximately $40,000. While it takes some borrowers decades to pay it off, with luck, work, and intention others have managed to repay their loans in under 10 years

(

AP

)

But Braley also didn’t put her life on hold. She and her husband bought a house and had a child — major expenses — but she took advantage of the pandemic-era interest rate decline and refinanced her federal student loans, reducing the interest on those loans from around 6 percent to just below 3 percent. She refinanced twice more and ultimately saved herself $55,000 in student loan interest, she said.

Braley was working as a physical therapist but made a career change. She posted about how she did it on LinkedIn and began receiving messages from other physical therapists asking her for advice. She took that and turned it into a side gig. Braley used her moonlighting money to pay down the remainder of her debt and was free from her school loans in December.

In Denver, Christopher Villarreal, 31, managed to pay back approximately $46,000 over the course of nine years.

He told the post that he grew up poor and used college as a way to try to escape that poverty. In 2016, he graduated, but after school, he was working as a retail manager and making only $13 an hour. His monthly payments did not even cover the full interest accruing month to month, meaning he could dutifully pay as much as he could afford month and still never chisel off a chunk of his debt.

He told the Wall Street Journal he felt like he was “drowning” in debt.

A balloon reading

A balloon reading “Congrats Grad” floats above the crowd during Harvard’s commencement ceremony on May 29, 2025, in Cambridge, Massachusetts

(

Getty Images

)

After years of working to get by, Villarreal was hired to work at a ski resort company. He took on a side business doing security screening for live events, and put as much money as he could into his savings each month — sometimes up to $2,000 per month.

Villareal had, at that point, enrolled in a repayment plan that stopped interest accrual, a key factor allowing him to actually pay down his loan. But, earlier this year, President Donald Trump announced that he planned to allow interest to once again accrue on those loans.

Knowing that was coming, Villareal made it a point to pay off his debt before it started growing again under the Trump administration.

In New York City, NiaChloe Bowman, a 28-year-old teacher, managed to pay her loans off in only two years, and that is largely because she went into college with a plan.

When she searched for schools, she prioritized institutions with financial aid packages that could help her keep her debt down during school. While she was in school, she worked on campus and at a restaurant, and managed to pay $2,000 of her debt down before she graduated.

She knew early on she did not want the millstone of debt hanging from her neck, so she prioritized paying it down early.

“Debt and oppression have been two of the things that have held us back as Black and brown people,” Bowman told the paper. “I didn’t want that to be my narrative.”

She was paid $70,000 plus a $10,000 signing bonus for her first job, and she made $500 monthly payments during the pandemic-era repayment pause, which ate away at her debt.

Once she was free of her college debt, she visited Niagara Falls, a place her mother always wanted to see. Her mother died in 2019, so she went to honor her memory and celebrate her victory.

borrowers decade Heres loans News paid Student

Related Posts

Is Christina Haack Engaged AGAIN? Heres How She Explains Her New Bling

March 19, 2026

Up to 280% hike: Good news for retirees as Ogun unveils new pension scheme

March 18, 2026

FUNAAB student who got his best grades in final year shows results, GPA

March 18, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

The Majesty of Ordinariness: THR Presents Q&A With Train Dreams Star Joel Edgerton and DP Adolpho Veloso

December 3, 2025

Anna Johnston SLAMS Family, Takes Credit for Success of 7 Little Johnstons

November 18, 2025

Arsenal to consider summer move for €100m-rated winger wanted by Man United

January 8, 2026

I see about 8 APC governors working against Tinubu ahead of 2027 – Primate Ayodele

January 9, 2026

Jodie Sweetin Trashes Her Opposite Candace Cameron Bure

March 6, 2026
About Us
About Us

Global Hublet is a trusted news and information platform delivering reliable updates on global events, business, technology, health, entertainment, and sports, helping readers stay informed with accurate, engaging, and SEO-friendly content every day worldwide audience.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn WhatsApp
Featured Posts

Things Have Gotten Much More Severe Than We Imagined: The Pitt Creator Breaks Down That Timely ICE Episode

March 20, 2026

Jos Christians solidify bond with Muslims, share food during Ramadan

March 20, 2026

Taylor Frankie Paul Breaks Silence on Bachelorette Cancelation: I Am a …

March 20, 2026
Most Popular

“‘I Can’t See a Weakness’ — Is This Finally Arsenal’s Year to Win the Title?”

November 1, 2025

“Arise, Sir David!” – David Beckham Receives Knighthood

November 4, 2025

“Don’t Test President Trump’s Resolve” – U.S. Lawmaker Warns Nigerian Government

November 2, 2025
Global Hublet
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
© 2026 Global Hublet. Designed by Global Hublet.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.