General
Questions about Eligibility and Applying
FAFSA
Questions
Home schooling
Divorce
Bankruptcy
and financial aid?
Miscellaneous
General
Questions about Eligibility and Applying
1. I probably
don't qualify for aid. Should I apply for aid anyway?
Yes. Many families
mistakenly think they don't qualify for aid and prevent themselves from
receiving it by failing to apply. In addition, there are a few sources
of aid such as unsubsidized Stafford and PLUS loans that are available
regardless of need. The FAFSA form is free. There is no good excuse
for not applying.
2. Do I
need to be admitted before I can apply for financial aid at a particular
university?
No. You can apply
for financial aid any time after January 1. To actually receive funds,
however, you must be admitted and enrolled at the university.
3. Why can't
I submit my financial aid application before January 1?
The need analysis
process for financial aid uses the family's income and tax information
from the most recent tax year (the base year) to judge your eligibility
for need-based financial aid during the upcoming academic year (the
award year). Since the base year ends December 31, you cannot submit
a financial aid application until January 1. After all, your parents
might earn a year-end bonus or realize capital gains from selling stocks
on December 31. If you submit the financial aid application before January
1, it will be rejected.
4. Do I
have to reapply for financial aid every year?
Yes. Most financial
aid offices require that you apply for financial aid every year. If
your financial circumstances change, you may get more or less aid. After
your first year you will receive a "Renewal Application" which
contains preprinted information from the previous year's FAFSA. Note
that your eligibility for financial aid may change significantly, especially
if you have a different number of family members in college. Renewal
of your financial aid package also depends on your making satisfactory
academic progress toward a degree, such as earning a minimum number
of credits and achieving a minimum GPA.
5. How do
I apply for a Pell Grant and other types of need-based aid?
Submit a FAFSA.
To indicate interest in student employment, student loans and parent
loans, you should check the appropriate boxes. Checking these boxes
does not commit you to accepting these types of aid. You will have the
opportunity to accept or decline each part of your aid package later.
Leaving these boxes unchecked will not increase the amount of grants
you receive.
6. Are my
parents responsible for my educational loans?
No. Parents are,
however, responsible for the Federal PLUS loans. Parents will only be
responsible for your educational loans if they co-sign your loan. In
general you and you alone are responsible for repaying your educational
loans.
You do not need
to get your parents to cosign your federal student loans, even if you
are under age 18, as the 'defense of infancy' does not apply to federal
student loans. (The defense of infancy presumes that a minor is not
able to enter into contracts, and considers any such contract to be
void. There is an explicit exemption to this principle in the Higher
Education Act with regard to federal student loans.) However, lenders
may require a cosigner on private student loans if your credit history
is insufficient or if you are underage. In fact, many private student
loan programs are not available to students under age 18 because of
the defense of infancy.
If your parents
(or grandparents) want to help pay off your loan, you can have your
billing statements sent to their address. Likewise, if your lender or
loan servicer provides an electronic payment service, where the monthly
payments are automatically deducted from a bank account, your parents
can agree to have the payments deducted from their account. But your
parents are under no obligation to repay your loans. If they forget
to pay the bill on time or decide to cancel the electronic payment agreement,
you will be held responsible for the payments, not them.
7. Why is
the family contribution listed on the Student Aid Report (the form you
receive summarizing the information you provided on the FAFSA, and indicating
the Expected Family Contribution) different from the family contribution
expected by the university?
The federal formula
for computing the expected family contribution is different from those
used by many universities. In particular, the federal formula does not
consider home equity as part of the assets.
8. If I
take a leave of absence, do I have to start repaying my loans?
Not immediately.
The subsidized Stafford loan has a grace period of 6 months and the
Perkins loan a grace period of 9 months before the student must begin
repaying the loan. When you take a leave of absence you will not have
to repay your loan until the grace period is used up. If you use up
the grace period, however, when you graduate you will have to begin
repaying your loan immediately. It is possible to request an extension
to the grace period, but this must be done before the grace period is
used up.
If your grace period
has run out in the middle of your leave of absence, you will have to
start making payments on your student loans.
9. I got
an outside scholarship. Should I report it to the financial aid office?
Yes. If you are
receiving any kind of financial aid from university or government sources,
you must report the scholarship to the financial aid office.
Unfortunately, the
university will adjust your financial aid package to compensate. Nevertheless,
the outside scholarship will have some beneficial effects. At some universities
outside scholarships are used to reduce the self-help level (money earned
through work-study). For example, at MIT the outside scholarship is
first applied to reducing the self-help level, and only when the scholarship
exceeds self-help does it replace institutional grants. At other universities
outside scholarships are used to replace loans instead of grants.
10. What
are GATE loans, and why doesn't my university participate?
GATE loans is a
nonprofit private loan program (Guaranteed Access to Education) offered
through participating schools in conjunction with Bank of America and
the National Collegiate Trust (NCT). There is a minimal credit check
(no FICO score or cosigner requirement) and schools can recommend whatever
loan amount they'd like the student to receive. The interest rates range
from LIBOR + 2.35% to LIBOR + 8.85%, with fees of 0% to 9%. The loan
term is 13 to 20 years. There are no federal guidelines or regulations
governing this loan program.
If this program
is so wonderful -- no loan limit, no credit check, low interest rate
-- why don't more schools participate? There are several reasons why
a university might not want to participate in this program: They bear
some of the cost if a family defaults on the loan. As a result, the
program will be most attractive to schools with a low default rate.
11. Where
can I get information about Federal student financial aid?
Call the Federal
Student Aid Information Center (FSAIC) at 1-800-4-FED-AID (1-800-433-3243)
or 1-800-730-8913 (if hearing impaired) and ask for a free copy of The
Student Guide: Financial Aid from the US Department of Education. This
toll free hotline is run by the US Department of Education and can answer
questions about federal and state student aid programs and applications.
You can also write to:
Federal Student
Aid Information Center
PO Box 84
Washington, DC 20044
12. Are
work-study earnings taxable?
The money you earn
from Federal Work-Study is generally subject to federal and state income
tax, but exempt from FICA taxes (provided you are enrolled full time
and work less than half time).
Federal Work-Study
earnings during the calendar year should be included in the totals for
AGI and Worksheet C on the FAFSA. Work-study earnings should only be
included in Worksheet C when they represent financial aid to the student,
since the answer to this question is used as an exclusion from taxed
income. The student should also be careful to report amounts based on
the calendar year, not the school year.
13. Is it
legal for a 17-year-old student to sign a promissory note for a student
loan, even though the student has not yet reached the age of majority?
Normally, a minor
cannot be held liable for a contract that they sign. However, in 1992
the Higher Education Act was amended to permit eligible students, defined
as per Title IV regulations, to sign promissory notes for their own
Federal student loans. As such, student loans represent one of the few
exceptions to the so-called "defense of infancy". The specific
citation is section 484A(b)(2) of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (20
USC 1091a(b)(2)), and applies to Stafford, PLUS and Consolidation Loans.
It does not appear to apply to Perkins and Direct Loans, although it
was clearly the intent of Congress that it should. Several
states have also passed similar laws that consider minors to be competent
to enter into acontract for an education loan. This extends similar
protection to private and non-federal loans. All private education loans
require a cosigner when the student is under the age of majority, just
to be safe.
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FAFSA Questions
1. Where
can I get a copy of the FAFSA?
You can ask your
guidance counselor for a copy. You can also get the FAFSA from the financial
aid office at a local college, your local public library, or by calling
1-800-4-FED-AID. The online version of the form is available at http://www.fafsa.ed.gov.
2. Are photocopies
of the FAFSA acceptable?
No. Only the original
FAFSA form produced by the US Department of Education is acceptable.
Photocopies, reproductions, facsimiles and electronic versions are all
not acceptable.
3. How soon
after January 1 should the FAFSA form be sent in? Is it better to wait
until the income tax forms have been completed?
Send in the form
as soon as possible after January 1. Do not wait until your taxes are
done. Although it is better to do your taxes early, it is ok to use
estimates of your income, so long as they aren't very far off from the
actual values. You will have an opportunity to correct any errors later.
If you wait too long, you might miss the deadline for state aid. Most
states require the FAFSA to be submitted by March 1, and some even as
early as early or mid-February.
4. I sent
in my FAFSA over four weeks ago but haven't heard anything. What should
I do?
If you haven't received
a Student Aid Report (SAR), call the Federal Student Aid Information
Center at 1-800-4-FED-AID (toll free) or 1-319-337-5665. You must provide
them with your Social Security number and date of birth as verification.
You can also write
to
Federal Student
Aid Programs
PO Box 4038
Washington, DC 52243-4038
to find out whether
your FAFSA has been processed or to request a duplicate copy of your
SAR.
5. I was
born on January 1, when I will be 24 years old. Can I check Yes in the
answer to the FAFSA question "Were you born before January 1, ..."
to qualify as an independent student?
The official answer
is no. If you check yes, your SAR will be flagged for verification.
However, most financial aid administrators would use professional judgment
to override the default dependency determination for a student born
on January 1 who also demonstrates financial self-sufficiency.
6. What
do those acronyms on the Student Aid Report (SAR) mean?
The acronyms on
the bottom of the SAR represent intermediate results in the need analysis.
To fully understand their meaning, you will need to be familiar with
the federal need analysis methodology, such as is used by the EFC Estimator.
The meanings of the acronyms are as follows:
EFC ~ Expected Family Contribution
TI ~ Total Income
ATI ~ Allowances Against Total Income
STX ~ State and Other Tax Allowance
EA ~ Employment Allowance
IPA ~ Income Protection Allowance
CAI ~ Contribution from Available Income
(Independent Student)
DNW ~ Discretionary Net Worth
APA ~ Education Savings and Asset Protection
Allowance
PCA ~ Parents' Contribution from Assets
AAI ~ Adjusted Available Income
TPC ~Total Parents' Contribution
TSC ~ Total Student's Contribution
PC ~ Parents' Contribution
SIC ~ Dependent Student's Income Contribution
SCA ~ Dependent Student's Contribution from Assets
If an asterisk appears
next to the EFC figure, the student has been selected for verification.
The asterisk is followed by a code that explains the reason why the
student was selected for verification. The letter explains the reason
for selection, and the number indicates the priority, with code 1 the
highest priority and code 25 the lowest priority.
7. I qualify
for the Simplified Needs Test. Should I fill out Section G anyway?
Yes. Some states
and most private colleges require the asset information in Section G
to compute their own financial aid awards. Including this information
will not affect your eligibility for federal financial aid (it is disregarded
by the Federal Need Analysis Methodology if you qualify for the Simplified
Needs Test). Even if none of the schools requires the information, you
should include it anyway, just in case.
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Home
Schooling and Financial Aid
Homeschooled students
are eligible for federal student aid for college if they have "completed
a secondary school education in a homeschool setting that is treated
as a home school or private school under State law" (Section 484(d)(3)
of the Higher Education Act of 1965). Homeschooled students have not
been required to take the GED or take an ability-to-benefit test since
the Higher Education Amendments of 1998. High school dropouts must take
a GED exam or an ability-to-benefit test, but students who have completed
a home schooled secondary education that satisfies the requirements
of state law do not. For additional information, see Federal Requirements
for Homeschoolers Seeking College Admission and Financial Aid, Home
School Legal Defense Association (HSLDA), May 2003. Many private scholarships
are open to homeschooled students. Some scholarships, however, require
a high school diploma or GED. If a scholarship requires a high school
diploma or GED, ask for a clarification or exception before applying.
If you encounter resistance, it can help to point out that in 2005 the
winner of the Siemens Westinghouse Competition in Math, Science and
Technology's $100,000 scholarship was a 16-year-old homeschooled student.
There aren't many
scholarships specifically targeted at homeschooled students, other than
those sponsored by the Home School Foundation.
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Divorce
and Financial Aid
An entire section
of the FinAid
website is devoted to the topic of Divorce and Financial Aid. It discusses
which parent is responsible for completing the FAFSA, the obligations
of non-custodial parents to pay for college, college support agreements,
the obligations of step-parents, and the ability of non-custodial parents
to take advantage of the various tax benefits for education.
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Bankruptcy
and Financial Aid
An entire section
of FinAid is devoted to the topic of Bankruptcy and Financial Aid. It
discusses both whether student loans can be discharged by bankruptcy,
as well as the impact of a bankruptcy on eligibility for student aid.
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Miscellaneous
and Unusual Questions
1. I have
heard about a scholarship for left-handed students. Can you tell me
more information about it?
This question comes
up frequently, because the popular press and scholarship matching services
like to use it as an example of unusual scholarships.
The only scholarship
for left-handed students is the Frederick and Mary F. Beckley Scholarship
of up to $1,000. This scholarship is awarded to left-handed students
who will be attending Juniata College. This scholarship is not available
to students who aren't enrolled at Juniata College. For more information,
write to Office of Student Financial Planning, Juniata College, 1700
Moore Street, Huntington, PA 16652.
To find other scholarships
for students with specific interests or abilities, see the profile-based
aid section. FinAid
also has a page devoted to unusual scholarships.
2. What
colleges have cut their tuition rates instead of increasing them?
A handful of schools
have instituted one-time tuition rate cuts, temporary tuition freezes,
or level tuition rates (same tuition rate all four years). A list of
these colleges can be found in the Tuition Freezes, Tuition Cuts and
Level Tuition section of FinAid.
3. Which
colleges have committed to providing free tuition or no loans in the
aid package for low income students?
A handful of schools
have instituted policies that ensure that low income students have no
loans in their financial aid packages.
4. Why doesn't
the FAFSA include line 58 of IRS Form 1040 (self-employment tax) with
taxes paid?
Line 27 of IRS Form
1040 subtracts one-half of self-employment taxes from AGI, corresponding
to the employer's share of FICA taxes. The employee share of FICA taxes
is calculated automatically by the need analysis formula based on income
earned from work. If you include line 58 in the total for taxes paid,
contrary to the FAFSA instructions, you are double counting the self-employment
taxes.
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