When someone gives you grace, they’re giving you a special favor or allowance. In the financial world, a grace period gives you more time to pay before certain consequences kick in.
Achieve explains what a grace period is and how you could use your grace period to your advantage when you need to.
Key takeaways:
A grace period is a specific amount of time after a deadline when you can still take action without incurring a penalty.
When you use a credit card, your grace period typically applies only to purchase transactions. When you use a card for a cash advance or use a check issued by your credit card company, there is no grace period and you’ll be charged interest starting on the transaction date.
Imagine that it's September 1 and your child's soccer fees are due. Payday is still a few days away, so you pay league fees using a check provided by your credit card issuer. Interest starts accruing on that day and continues to build until you pay the balance. Paying interest is one of the things that could make getting out of credit card debt so challenging.
However, if you charge the fee to your credit card, you have until the payment due date to pay the balance without incurring interest. That buys you more time.
In a nutshell, with credit cards and other types of revolving debt, the grace period for purchases typically lasts from the last day of a billing cycle until the payment due date.
With installment loans—like mortgages, auto loans, and other non-educational installment debts—the grace period lasts a set number of days after the due date. The length of the grace period can vary by lender, but many installment loans give you an extra 15 days to get your payment in.
Let’s say your vehicle payment is due on the 10th of the month. Your lender may give you until the 25th to make your payment without penalty.
In a nutshell, installment loans typically allow a certain number of days beyond the due date to make payment without penalty.
Student loan grace periods may also vary by loan type—federal or private.
Federal student loan grace period
Imagine you've spent years in college and racked up federal student loan debt. Most lenders allow you a six- to nine-month grace period before your first monthly payment is due. That's because lenders realize that you may not immediately land a job that enables you to make regular monthly payments.
Private student loan grace period
Some private student loans require students to make payments while still in school, while others provide a grace period. If a grace period is important to you, check with the lender before submitting a loan application.
In a nutshell, some student loan lenders (but not all) give borrowers a six- to nine-month grace period before their first student loan payment is due.
Missing the grace period is not the end of the world, but it can pinch a bit. Here are some things that could happen when a borrower fails to make a payment before the grace period ends.
If you think a payment may be late, your best bet is to contact your lender and let them know what's happening. If there's a good reason, like hospitalization or job loss, they may be willing to work with you and preserve your credit score.
Here are a few tips to help you gain the most benefits from a grace period:
This story was produced by Achieve and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
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