free applications??

<p>hey ppl, was wondering which colleges provide free online applications unlike many college wehre u gotta pay like US$50-70 per appl and it can get quite expensive for many ppl, specially those outside US and form poorer places..... thnx....</p>

<p>i know of drexel n smith....anothers??</p>

<p>tulane does</p>

<p>University of Rochester waives the application fee if you apply online.</p>

<p>so :
drexel
smith
tulane
rochester
colgate</p>

<p>carleton, colgate, grinnel, and hamilton do also.</p>

<p>lewis and clark college--> free application</p>

<p>are most of these LACs??</p>

<p>Trinity University, Knox(by invitation)</p>

<p>St. John's College (in annapolis and Santa Fe) has no application fee.. and you are required to submit a paper app.
Many of the catholic universities will waive app fee if you sign up for their information request form list early. some even waive the essay requirement (just send in a graded high school essay instead) if you send in your app by a certain date.</p>

<p>most colleges will waive their application fee if you're under a certain income bracket...like, if you get free or reduced lunch at your high school, or reduced rates on the SATs...</p>

<p>kenyon, upitt (I think) if you apply online</p>

<p>If $ is a problem, the cost of applications is the last of your worries. </p>

<p>Relatively few colleges provide full financial aid for poor American students. Even fewer provide full financial aid for intentionals. </p>

<p>Thus, if $ is a problem, the first thing to worry about is whether you'll be able to afford the college if accepted. To learn this, check out their financial aid web page. That will say what kind of aid they provide for foreign as well as American students. It's worth it, too, to e-mail the financial aid office, explain one's financial situation and ask what they might be able to provide. It's simply a waste of time to do the work to get accepted to a college and then find out that one can't afford it.</p>

<p>If one is poor and is a US student, you can get a fee waiver from your GC. Getting a fee waiver may depend on your qualifying for the federal school lunch program so even if you don't plan to eat those lunches, do the paperwork for qualification.</p>

<p>Just because a college provides free applications for, for instance on-line applicants, doesn't mean that it is generous with financial aid. It may be providing free applications in order to increase its overall applicant pool so as to appear to be more selective.</p>

<p>College of Wooster both for application and financial aid application instead of the high fees for the CCS or CSS or whatever the college board calls it.</p>

<p>Brandeis does by invitation.</p>

<p>Wellesley does to all who apply online.</p>

<p>try st.john's university in new york too. free online apps
<a href="http://new.stjohns.edu/admission/undergraduate/apply.sju%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://new.stjohns.edu/admission/undergraduate/apply.sju&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p>

<p>so:
St.john's university in new york
Wellesley
Brandeis by invitation
College of Wooster
Kenyon,
Upitt
Trinity University,
Knox(by invitation)
Lewis and Clark college
Carleton,
Colgate,
Grinnel,
Hamilton
Drexel
Smith
Tulane
Rochester</p>

<p>thnx ppl!! :)</p>

<p>University of the Pacific.</p>

<p>Case-Western Reserve waived the fee last year if you applied online</p>

<p>The common app lists the fee for each college and if they waive it for online applications. There was a thread on this in the parents forum a while back, I think.</p>