FAFSA Question

<p>When applying for student financial aid from the federal government based on the information submitted by the student and their parent(s). </p>

<p>The FAFSA determines your eligiblity to receive federal aid : pell grants, seog grants (if applicable to your school) federal work study and federal student loans (subsidized/unsubsidized stafford loans and perkins loans). The FAFSA is required by all public colleges and universities and an overwhelming number of private schools require the FAFSA (some in addition to other FA forms). </p>

<p>Approximately 350 schools use the CSS profile to gather additional financial information in order to grant their own institutional aid. The cost to file the CSS profile is $25 for the first school and $16 for each additional school.</p>

<p>If you attend a profile school, they use a combination of both the federal and institutional methodologies. </p>

<p>At minimum you file the FAFSA (at almost every school) to determine your eligibility for federal aid (Pell/ seog grants, stafford and perkins loans). Most public univeristies will just require the fafsa (the exception may be UVA, UNC- CH, Mich and a few others which may require their own forms)</p>

<p>The CSS profile is used at different colleges that distribute their own institutional aid (Many of these schools have much deeper pockets).</p>

<p>Many schools that use a federal methodology to determine EFC will require only the FAFSA. Schools that use an instutional methodology or a combination of the 2 will require the CSS profile or their own FA forms.</p>

<p>Differences between the IM and FM models are</p>

<p>IM collects information on estimated academic year family income, medical expenses, elementary and secondary school tuition and unusual circumstances. FM omits these questions.</p>

<p>IM considers a fuller range of family asset information, while FM ignores assets of siblings, all assets of certain families with less than $50,000 of income, and both home and family farm equity.</p>

<p>FM defines income as the “adjusted gross income” on federal tax returns, plus various categories of untaxed income. IM includes in total income any paper depreciation, business, rental or capital losses which artificially reduce adjusted gross income.</p>

<p>FM does not assume a minimum student contribution to education; IM expects the student, as primary beneficiary of the education, to devote some time each year to earning money to pay for education.</p>

<p>FM ignores the noncustodial parent in cases of divorce or separation; IM expects parents to help pay for education, regardless of current marital status.</p>

<p>FM and IM apply different percentages to adjust the parental contribution when multiple siblings are simultaneously enrolled in college, and IM considers only siblings enrolled in undergraduate programs.</p>

<p>The IM expected family share represents a best estimate of a family’s capacity (relative to other families) to absorb, over time, the costs of education. It is not an assessment of cash on hand, a value judgment about how much a family should be able to use current income, or a measure of liquidity. The final determinations of demonstrated need and awards rest with the University and are based upon a uniform and consistent treatment of family circumstances.</p>

<p>Except in the most extraordinary circumstances, Colleges classifies incoming students as dependent upon parents for institutional aid purposes, even though some students may meet the federal definition of “independence.”</p>

<p>The profile will take into consideration tuition for children attending high school. They may consider school expenses outside of high school for special needs children. They will consider unreimbursed medical expenses and taking care of elderly parents.</p>

<p>Students enrolling as dependent students are considered dependent throughout their undergraduate years when need for institutional scholarships is determined.</p>

<p>For institutional aid purposes a student may not “declare” independence due to attainment of legal age, internal family arrangements, marriage or family disagreements.</p>

<p>Your COA (cost of attendance) is tuition, room board, books travel expenses and some misc. expenses associated with attending college.</p>

<p>Thank you for taking the time to post this. Im glad i asked this and i guess i learn something new everyday. I never heard of css and now learned some schools i was thinking of applying to require it.</p>

<p><a href=“CSS Profile – CSS Profile | College Board”>CSS Profile – CSS Profile | College Board;

<p>Generalized lists are convenient but for the most accurate info you need to go to the finaid page at each school’s website you are considering and read about what they require to apply for finaid. It is more work but necessary in order to have the ‘real dope’. The website finaid pages will also give you the deadlines for when you need to apply.</p>

<p>Ok thank you. I just made a common app account yesterday and plan to go way into depth once i get home sunday. I have one more question and it has to do with the accuracy of each schools net price calculator. They seem all over the place from no aid to some estimating much more than i truly need (but im a little greedy and wouldnt mind the extra $)</p>

<p>On another note i noticed this is my 500th post on this site :)</p>

<p>The first thing is an NPC is only as accurate as the info entered into it, so make sure you have accurate info. The self-employed, business owners, those with rental properties are likely to get innacurate results, though none of that seems to apply to you. The second thing is that only a very few schools promise to meet all your need(as the school determines your need) but most don’t. Each NPC will use that school’s formulas for aid and yes, the results can be very different depending on that school’s ability to provide aid.</p>

<p>[retiring early] was a thought hes brought up and looks like a bad idea. If it was that easy then i guess everyone would be doing it.</p>

<p>Yes, when people first hear about FA without knowing the details, many wrongly think that as long as I can get my EFC lower, I’ll get tons of aid. Well, the big problem with that is most schools don’t have much aid to give.</p>

<p>FAFSA EFC means little to most schools. Schools aren’t under any legal obligation to do anything with that number except see if you qualify for any fed aid (which isn’t much at all…and is only some “free money” to those with the lowest incomes).</p>

<p>With your family income in the low $100k range, your FAFSA EFC will likely be around $25k or so. Since you dad was thinking of retiring early, then that means he must have assets.</p>

<p>As mentioned earlier, if your parents contribute to retirement accts like 401k’s, those annual deposits will get “added back in” as income. So, if your parents contribute $10k per year to a 401k, and it reduces their taxable income, then that $10k gets added back in for FA purposes.</p>