Step-By-Step Through FAFSA
By Anna Leider
This FREE application can lead you to a wealth of financial aid, and filling it out is not as hard as you may think.
Each year, more than eight million students receive some form of federal financial aid. To get your share, you must first file the federal government’s Free Application for Federal Student Aid, better known as the FAFSA. It determines eligibility for all federal aid programs, from Pell Grants to student loans. It determines eligibility for most state and collegiate-based aid programs. And, it even indirectly determines eligibility for some merit-based aid, since many schools reserve their own (limited) scholarships for students who don’t qualify for need-based funds.
How much you’re eligible for will depend on the financial and personal information you provide on the FAFSA. Federal processors evaluate the data, determine your family’s ability to pay, and then tell you how much you and your family should contribute toward college (or your Expected Family Contribution).
The form can be intimidating, but if you take it step-by-step, it’s worth the effort to fill it out. And don’t forget, it’s free to file so you have nothing to lose.
Getting Started
You can pick up a FAFSA in your guidance office by mid-November (or online at www.fafsa.ed.gov), however, you can’t file it until January 1 of the year in which you plan to start college (that’s January 1, 2005, for those who hope to start college in September, 2005). You should, however, file as soon after that date as possible since a great deal of financial aid is delivered on a first-come, first-served basis. Money is awarded until it runs out; late filers get nothing.
Unfortunately, many students miss out on financial aid opportunities because they fail to meet the filing deadlines. The best financial aid awards (those heavy on grants and lighter on loans) are generally given to the earliest applicants.
Gather Your Papers
To make sure you’re one of the early birds who receives the most aid possible, work with your parents to start collecting the necessary financial records over the winter holidays. To get organized, you might try putting your paperwork and information into two folders:
Folder 1: Income and Expense Information
All income and expense data come from the prior year (2004 for the 2005/2006 award year). Here’s the financial information you’ll need to collect:
- Taxable income for both parents and student, including wages, pensions, capital gains, interest, dividends, annuities, unemployment compensation, alimony received, rent collected, and business income.
- Non-taxable income for both parents and student including workers’ compensation, welfare benefits (excluding food stamps), housing and food allowances, child support received, untaxed Social Security benefits, untaxed income from pensions and annuities, veterans’ non-education benefits, tax-exempt interest income, deductible payments made to a retirement plan (such as an IRA or Keogh), and earned income credit.
- Expenses such as U.S. income taxes paid and child support paid.
Folder 2: Asset Information
- The value of cash, savings, and checking accounts held under the names of parents and the student.
- Net worth of all the parents’ and student’s investments (except for retirement plans), including stocks, bonds, CDs, money market funds, mutual funds, commodities, trust funds, Education IRAs, state-based college savings plans (except prepaid tuition plans) and real estate holdings (rental property and second homes). You need not include the equity in your family’s primary residence.
The net worth of any family business and/or farm (excluding farms that are principal residences).
You must report the net worth of all these assets as of the date you sign the form, so before you record any totals, be sure your family pays off all its bills and pays down any consumer debt, like credit card balances.
Be Accurate
In completing the FAFSA, be as accurate as you can. Mistakes will cause your application to be returned. These errors may include giving monthly amounts instead of yearly amounts, writing in the margins, checking the ovals (rather than filling them in).
If a question or two seems confusing, call the federal student aid hot line at 1-800-4-FED-AID, or ask a guidance counselor or financial aid administrator. Many colleges now have toll-free numbers for exactly that purpose. If a question still proves troublesome, explain your problem in a letter to the school’s financial aid administrator. Note: You’re less likely to make mistakes if you apply online. FAFSA on the Web includes worksheets, online help, detailed instructions, and a built-in editing tool that helps prevent errors and reduces rejections.
Once you’ve gathered all your financial data, the FAFSA is pretty straightforward. Answer each question unless the FAFSA specifically tells you it’s a step you can skip. Let’s review each section:
- Student Name, Rank, and Serial Number
Questions 1 to 17 cover the personal basics: The student’s name, e-mail address, permanent address, Social Security number, date of birth, permanent phone number, driver’s license number, citizenship status, and marital status.
- Student Background
Questions 18 to 31 deal mostly with:
- The student’s educational plans.
- The highest level of education completed by the student’s mother and father.
- The student’s state of legal residence.
- The types of aid for which he or she wants to be considered (for example, loans and/or work-study). To maximize your chances for receiving aid, you should indicate a willingness to accept loans and work-study. You can always change your mind later.
- Registration for the Selective Service (military). If you’re male, age 18-25, you may use this section to register. (In most instances, male students must be registered to receive federal student aid.)
- Drug offenses. If you’ve never been convicted of a drug offense, simply check the “No” box and move on. If, however, you do have a past drug-related conviction, you may be ineligible for federal student aid.
- Student Income and Assets
The first three questions (32-34) ask about your tax filing status—which tax return you will file, and whether you have already completed this tax return. If at all possible, complete your return before you tackle this part of the FAFSA. Much of the information is the same. For example, your adjusted gross income, U.S. income tax paid, and number of exemptions. The FAFSA even gives you the exact 1040 line reference numbers.
Questions 35 through 47 cover student income and assets. Dependent students may find that some of these income and asset questions do not apply. In this case, enter “0.” An unanswered question can get your FAFSA returned with a “request for additional information.’’ This will hold up the processing of your form and could jeopardize the amount of funding you will receive.
- Dependent vs. Independent
Questions 48 to 54 address the student’s dependency status. Students who meet one of these criteria may skip Step 4—you’re an “independent” student and your eligibility for financial aid will be determined without consideration of your parents’ income and assets.
You’re independent if you are:
- 24 years old by December 31 of the award year.
- A graduate or professional student during the award year.
- Married (or separated).
- A parent or have other dependents who currently receive more than half their support from you.
- An orphan or a ward of the court.
- A veteran of the U.S. Armed Forces.
As we move further away from the traditional “Ozzie and Harriet” families of the 1950s, schools may determine dependent status based on “unusual” living circumstances—being raised by grandparents, or by same-sex parents, unwed parents, or common-law parents. Ask your school if you are unsure of your own “dependency” status.
- Parents’ Personal Data
In questions 55 through 69, dependent students must provide information about their parents’ marital status, Social Security numbers, number of household members (including the number who will be enrolled in college at least half time), state of legal residence, and the age of the older parent. Each of these elements affects the calculation for your Expected Family Contribution (EFC), so answer the questions carefully. For example:
- Older parents are expected to contribute less since they are closer to retirement.
- Parental contribution is divided by the number of students in college.
- If the parents are divorced or separated, include only the financial data on the parent with whom the student lives for the greater part of the 12 months preceding the date of the application. For example, if that parent has remarried, the student must include that stepparent’s income and asset data as well. Note: Some colleges request information on the “other” natural parent and may expect a contribution from that parent as well.
- Parents’ Tax Filing Status
The next three questions ask you about your parents’ tax filing status. Again, try to complete tax returns before you tackle the FAFSA. Most colleges will eventually ask to see a copy of your family’s signed tax return, and your FAFSA numbers must come within a $400 tolerance range. If you are outside this range, the college will ask you to make corrections to your form. Again, this could put you at serious risk for losing valuable funding.
The FAFSA also asks whether you are eligible to file a 1040A or 1040EZ (even if you filed a regular 1040). If you and your parents can answer “yes” to this question and your annual incomes are below $50,000, your family’s assets will be excluded from consideration entirely.
- Parents’ Income and Assets
Questions 73 through 83 cover parental income and assets. It is important to indicate whether earned income is from two workers or only one. Where there are two workers, the family receives an additional allowance that helps increase the applicant’s eligibility for aid. This allowance also applies to a single parent household when that parent has earnings from work.
The EFC calculation is based primarily on the family’s adjusted gross income (AGI), however, it is designed to reflect the financial strength of the household, so it counts untaxed income, as well. Worksheets A and B (Questions 78 and 79) are used to collect this data, while Worksheet C (Question 80) covers items that families may exclude from income, for example, child support paid, taxable work-study earnings, scholarship aid that was included with AGI, Hope Tax Credits, and Lifetime Learning Credits.
Remember to be truthful. The FAFSA now collects your parents’ Social Security numbers to make it easier for the Department of Education to verify income reported on the FAFSA with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
Many people think the “net worth” of their assets will eliminate them from aid consideration. Parents, however, receive an allowance to shelter some of their assets and even then they must contribute only a small percentage of the balance; less than six percent.
- Independent Students Only
Independent students must answer a couple of quick questions about the number of people in their household and the number of household members who will be enrolled as college students during the upcoming academic year. Answers to these questions affect your EFC.
- List your colleges
Good news: You fill out the FAFSA only once regardless of how many colleges you’re considering. Questions 86 through 97 ask students to list the colleges that are to receive the processed data and indicate their housing plans at each. (Do you intend to live on-campus, off-campus, or with parent?) This helps aid administrators better determine their cost of attendance.
To make sure your data goes to the correct school, record each school’s federal school code. You’ll find these codes online (www.fafsa.ed.gov) or in your high school guidance office.
If you cannot locate the correct school code, be careful to include the school’s complete name, address, city, state, and zip. (The processor won’t know whether “U. of M.” refers to the University of Michigan or the University of Maryland.)
- Sign and Date The Form
Finally, students (and parents) must sign and date the form. In doing so, they certify that (if requested) they will provide information (for example, a copy of their tax return) to verify any recorded data.They also declare that they are not in default on any federal student loans and promise to use any federal student aid for educational purposes only.
If the form was completed by someone outside your immediate family, that person must sign and date the form, as well. There is nothing wrong with getting help with your FAFSA, however, the Department of Education wants to know—that way it can clear up innocent misunderstandings, as well as detect patterns of fraud.
Note: Never mail your tax return with your FAFSA. Processing centers are only interested in the financial data you provide on your FAFSA. They have paper shredders that destroy any income tax returns included in the envelope. Also, don’t mail your tax return to a college or university unless requested.
What Happens Next?
Three to four weeks after families mail in their FAFSA, they will receive a multi-part document called a Student Aid Report (SAR). If you recorded an e-mail address on your paper FAFSA or you filed your FAFSA online, you will receive an e-mail that links you to your SAR online.
The SAR lists all the information you included on your aid application and tells you how much money you’ll be expected to contribute to college costs. This is your EFC (Expected Family Contribution). The information will also be sent electronically to the schools you designate and your home state’s scholarship agency (as well as the state agency of every school on your list).
Review your SAR very carefully. If there are any mistakes (for instance, if a $500 has become a $5,000) send the correction back to the processor immediately. It is now up to the college financial aid administrator to take all this information, determine your eligibility for student aid, and develop your financial aid package.
Anna Leider is the author of Don’t Miss Out: The Ambitious Student’s Guide to Financial Aid (Octameron Associates, $15 postpaid); www.octameron.com.
Common Mistake #1
Not Applying At All
“Some students don’t apply because they think their parents make too much money, but it’s impossible to say what income is too high. We had a student whose family made well over $80,000 a year, and the student qualified for everything. On the surface, you would think this person would not qualify for a grant, but this family had a total of eight children with six in college and needed financial aid to put another child through school.”
—Larry Moeder, Director of Admissions and Student Financial Assistance, Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS
Common Mistake #2
Missing Deadlines
“Most states have a deadline to apply for state grant aid and most colleges also have a ‘priority date’ to complete the FAFSA. For example, the UC system uses March 2. Needy students who miss this deadline are likely to lose out on significant amounts of need-based grant funding.”
—Sheryl Hayes, Director of Financial Aid, University of California-Riverside
Common Mistake #3
Not Filling Out the Form Carefully
“Providing a nickname rather than your name as it appears on your Social Security card, providing a sibling’s Social Security number by accident, or not accurately reporting income can delay the application process.”
—Vickie Crupper, Assistant Director, Office of Financial Aid, University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Common Mistake #4
Leaving Off the Signatures
“For dependent filings, all FAFSAs must be signed by both the student and parents. For independent filings, the student and spouse, if applicable, must sign. People filing online at www.fafsa.ed.gov should pay careful attention to the instructions for printing and submitting the signature pages.”
—Jean McDonald-Rash, Deputy University Director of Financial Aid, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ
Common Mistake #5
Not Following Directions
“Using cents on the form can cause a big problem. One year I had a student whose income was $1,000 and he wrote it as $1,000.00. Needless to say, the form came back with a $100,000 income and the student was not eligible for any aid.”
—Beverly N. Horner, Director of Financial Aid, Salisbury State University, MD |
A WORD ABOUT PROFILE
In general, students looking at lower-priced colleges (for example, in-state public schools) must complete only the FAFSA, while students looking at higher priced schools (private schools and out-of-state public schools) must complete both the FAFSA and the College Board’s PROFILE (or a college’s own supplemental aid application).
PROFILE is a standard form, similar to the FAFSA. However, schools can supplement the form with hundreds of their own questions. PROFILE may ask about the value of primary and secondary vehicles, life insurance annuities, tax-deferred pension plans, itemized deductions, child care expenses, and consumer debt.
If you’re applying to one of the 200+ PROFILE schools, register via the College Board Online, www.collegeboard.com. You’ll then complete an online form customized with each of your school’s financial aid questions. PROFILE costs $5 to register, then $17 for each school that is to receive your information. |
MORE EXPERT ADVICE
Here are some more helpful ideas from our team of financial aid counselors.
Send Additional Information If Necessary
“Parents and students should feel free to send additional information to schools if their financial situation is not accurately captured by the provided forms. For example, we recently had a family whose credit rating had gone sour because of the unforeseen costs of medical care. This wasn’t a case of the family being negligent, but a case of an insurance company not paying a claim when it should have.”
—Sally Donahue, Director of Financial Aid, Harvard College, Cambridge, MA
Don’t Delay
“Some people wait to hear about the admission decision before they apply for financial aid, and then they miss the opportunity for financial aid. This is a major mistake. At many schools, the admission and financial aid time lines occur simultaneously.”
—John Gudvangen, Associate Director of Financial Aid, Colorado College, Colorado Springs
Ask Politely
“If students are awarded financial aid and it’s not what they feel they need, they can call the college to ask about the package. However, they should do this in a polite way, not in a way that suggests they’re entitled to more aid. They shouldn’t say, ‘I got such and such amount of money from this college but not from you.’ The feeling of entitlement does not set the stage well for constructive discussion. Polite inquiries might include, ‘I thought I would get more grant money, not a loan. Is there anything I missed filling out on the form?’ Students can then make an appeal.”
—Rebecca Dixon, Associate Provost, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL |