Many parents pay for college with a combination of current income, savings, and financial aid. By learning the basics of financial aid, you'll be able to understand how the aid process works and compare the aid awards your child receives.
What is financial aid?Financial aid can be further broken down into two types: need-based, which is based on your child's financial need, and merit-based, which is based on your child's academic, athletic, or artistic merit. Many parents pay for college with a combination of current income, savings, and financial aid. By learning the basics of financial aid, you'll be able to understand how the aid process works and compare the aid awards your child receives. Financial aid is money distributed primarily by the federal government and colleges in the form of student loans, grants, scholarships, and work-study jobs. Loans and work-study must be repaid (through monetary or work obligations), while grants and scholarships do not. A student can receive both federal and college aid. How is financial need determined?Financial need is generally determined by looking at a family's income, assets, and household information. The government's aid application, the FAFSA, uses a formula known as the federal methodology.
A detailed analysis of the formula is beyond the scope of this discussion, but generally here's how it works: (1) parent income is counted up to 47% (income equals AGI plus untaxed income/benefits minus certain deductions); (2) student income is counted at 50% over a certain amount ($6,400 for the 2016/2017 school year); (3) parent assets are counted at 5.6% (home equity, retirement assets, cash value life insurance, and annuities are excluded); and (4) student assets are counted at 20%.
The result is a figure known as your expected family contribution, or EFC. This is the amount of money you must contribute to college costs to be eligible for aid. Your EFC remains constant, no matter which college your child applies to.
Your EFC is not the same as your child's financial need. To calculate financial need, subtract your EFC from the cost at a given college. Because tuition, fees, and room-and-board expenses are different at each college, your child's financial need will vary depending on the cost of a particular college.
Example: You fill out the FAFSA and your EFC is calculated at $35,000. College A costs $60,000 per year and College B costs $50,000 per year. Your child's financial need at College A is $25,000 and $15,000 at College B.
Colleges use their own formula for determining financial need. Basically, the process works the same way except that the institutional methodology in the standard college PROFILE application typically takes a more in-depth look at your income and assets. For example, some colleges may consider your home equity in assessing your ability to pay college costs.
Tip: Just because your child has financial need doesn't necessarily mean that colleges will meet 100% of that need. In fact, it's not uncommon for colleges to meet only a portion of it. If this happens to you, you'll have to make up the gap, in addition to paying your EFC.
How do I apply and when?
The main way to file the FAFSA is online at www.fafsa.ed.gov. In addition, private colleges typically require the PROFILE form, which you'll need to submit by each individual college deadline (this form is usually submitted online as well).
The FAFSA is typically filed as soon as possible after January 1st in the year your child is seeking aid (the official federal deadline for filing the FAFSA is June 30, but most colleges have an earlier deadline). Parents should try to submit the FAFSA as soon as possible because some financial aid programs operate on a first-come, first-served basis. Even if you haven't completed your federal income tax return, you can submit your FAFSA with estimated tax numbers and then update it later.
Note: Starting with the 2017/2018 school year, families will be able to file the FAFSA as early as October 1, 2016, using their prior year's tax information. This earlier timeline will be a permanent change.
After your FAFSA is processed, you will receive a Student Aid Report that highlights your EFC. Colleges that you list on the FAFSA will also get a copy of the report. Then the financial aid administrator at each school that accepts your child will try to craft an aid package to meet your child's financial need. Colleges aren't obligated to meet all of it.
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