<p>okay so i had to send in verification for my financial aid. i did all that and now it says that "my file is complete...." but when will i finally know how much i am offered? i was offered financial aid earlier in april and i accepted. sooooo....what now?</p>
<p>Same thing with me… On one of the documents it said that it’s been “received and is under review” but it’s taking such a long time!</p>
<p>Are you guys incoming freshmen?</p>
<p>Yes we are. I am concerned because they don’t really keep me updated and I don’t want to be told that there was a problem at the last minute.</p>
<p>So did you guys receive your initial awards? And then they asked for verification?</p>
<p>im concerned too that it is taking this long…</p>
<p>i accepted my initial awards and they asked for verification. i sent in all my documents, now it says everything has been received and on time. they still havent offered me any awards though…</p>
<p>I think this happened to me last year. There weren’t really any changes made to my initial awards after the verification process. </p>
<p>You guys should be fine.</p>
<p>i hope so! haha did they send you an email or anything confirming the awards?</p>
<p>They always send you an e-mail if anything regarding your financial award is updated.
Even still, I would check the financial page once every couple days to make sure though.</p>
<p>Hang in there, I know how it is… :]</p>
<p>When did you actually get notice of your financial aid? I need the federal loans due to some issues. I didn’t accept any before but now I need them.</p>
<p>randomm but are you a current student there? do we only sign up for first quarter classes at spop or the whole year?</p>
<p>@mixedup92, if you rejected them before, you would have to talk with the FA office to discuss it, I would think…</p>
<p>@hellother, yeah I’ll be entering second year at UCI. You sign up for your Fall quarter classes during SPOP.</p>
<p>Okay, one of my “gift aids” is still unconfirmed (the CAL A FLIP one). Should I be worried? I really don’t want to take out more loans than necessary.</p>