It’s FAFSA time: Why and how to apply for college financial aid
This time of year, many teenagers and young adults are deep into thinking about one of the most important financial decisions of their lives: whether and where to go to college.
An important tool in that decision is the document that must be filled out before each new academic year: the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA.
The application is updated every year, with the newest form becoming available around Oct. 1 in both printed form (10 pages including instructions) and on the government’s financial aid website — studentaid.gov. It can be filled out in English or Spanish.
About a week or two after completing a FAFSA, a student will get an estimate of eligibility for federal aid. That information will go to the schools the student designates, which will then set the stage for the type and amount of aid a school will offer the student.
The top advice for filling it out is to do it as soon as possible.
“The earlier that they apply, that means we can communicate with them about their application status or if there’s anything incomplete,” said Brittany Tweed, financial aid chief at Metro State University in St. Paul, Minnesota.
This year, the FAFSA form has taken out some questions, such as those about selective service registration and drug convictions, that may have deterred some people from considering higher education.
Here’s a rundown on the financial aid application process.
What’s at stake
As with any governmental process, a lot of jargon and acronyms must be learned. To start, the Department of Education uses the FAFSA to calculate a student’s EFC, which stands for Expected Family Contribution.
Subtract the EFC from a school’s cost of attendance and you’ve got a student’s financial need. Financial aid fills the gap in the form of Pell Grants, work-study, scholarships, other grants and then loans.
Students should aim for grants first, of course, then turn to other forms of aid. The current maximum Pell Grant award is $6,895 per school year, though that may be increased with a decision expected to come from the Department of Education this month.
The FAFSA also serves as the application for federal loans, which come in two forms. Subsidized loans are the most beneficial to students and families because the government pays interest on them until a student graduates.
But even federal loans that are not tied to need, such as the Federal Stafford Loan and Federal PLUS Loan, are accessible only by filing a FAFSA.
Steps in the process
Set up a Federal Student Aid ID at studentaid.gov. For traditional college students, those coming right out of high school and dependent on their parents, IDs will also need to be set up for the parent or parents individually.
FAFSA requires the Social Security number of the student and the student’s parents if the student is a dependent.
The application requires tax information from the parents and the student, if the student has been working. For the 2023-24 academic year, tax information from 2021 is needed.
There’s a way to link FAFSA to the IRS database, but it is one of the most complicated parts of the application process. “The taxpayer can put some of their biographical information in, leave the FAFSA site, grab their tax information from the IRS and then have it imported directly into their FAFSA,” said Meghan Flores, state grant and financial aid manager at the Minnesota Office of Higher Education.
The financial aid formula is heavily weighted toward income. The FAFSA also seeks information about untaxed income, such as payments to retirement savings plans. Many financial advisers recommend that students and families try to minimize income by avoiding realizing capital gains in a year covered in a FAFSA application.
A FAFSA also requires that both the student and parent list their assets, not including the home where they live. Some other forms of student aid may consider the primary home value.
The Department of Education’s formula for aid eligibility is explained in a 29-page guide that’s available on the studentaid.gov website. It shows that student assets are assessed at a higher rate than parents’ assets, which leads many advisers to tell families to put college savings plans in the name of parents.
Fortunately, the online FAFSA doesn’t have to be filled out and filed in one session. Applicants can save the document, log in again using the Federal Student Aid ID and finish later.