Direct Consolidation Loan: The Federal Program Explained
A free federal program that combines multiple federal student loans into one — not to be confused with private debt consolidation loans.
What a Direct Consolidation Loan Actually Does
If you have multiple federal student loans — say, a few Direct Subsidized Loans and a Direct Unsubsidized Loan — a Direct Consolidation Loan combines them into a single new federal loan with one monthly payment and one fixed interest rate. The new rate is the weighted average of your original loans’ rates, rounded up to the nearest one-eighth of a percent — so it’s not a way to get a lower rate, just a simpler one.
Direct Consolidation Loan vs. Private Debt Consolidation
These two terms sound nearly identical but work completely differently. It’s worth understanding the distinction before deciding which one (if either) applies to your situation.
| Factor | Direct Consolidation Loan (Federal) | Private Debt Consolidation |
|---|---|---|
| Who offers it | US Department of Education | Banks, credit unions, online lenders |
| What it combines | Federal student loans only | Credit cards, personal loans, and other non-federal debt |
| Cost | Free — no fees | Subject to interest rate, sometimes origination fees |
| Effect on rate | Weighted average of existing rates (not lower) | Can be lower or higher depending on credit and lender |
| Eligibility basis | No credit check required | Based on credit score and income |
If you’re trying to lower your student loan interest rate rather than just simplify payments, a Direct Consolidation Loan won’t do that — refinancing through a private lender might, though it comes with the tradeoff of losing federal protections. See our guide on student loan refinancing options for that comparison.
When Consolidation Makes Sense
How to Apply
Frequently Asked Questions
Source: U.S. Department of Education, Federal Student Aid (studentaid.gov). This page provides general information, not financial advice. Last updated: June 2026.
