<p>If your parents make 20k/year you will get a full ride at Columbia 100%.
Columbia is need-blind meaning that they are much much more generous with financial aid than NYU, on par with the rest of the Ivies except Harvard and Princeton which automaticlaly gives full ride to any students making less than 60k</p>
<p>Your primary residence doesn't count as an asset so if your house (the one you live in) is worth a couple of hundred thou - a million it won't count against you. However, any other property besides that will be counted.</p>
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What if your income is low (enough to qualify for reduced fee lunch) but you have a lotttt of assets (like let's say, more than a mill)
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<p>fafsa asks for a bunch of things, stocks and whatnot are counted im pretty sure. property is not tho as azn said.</p>
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Columbia is need-blind meaning that they are much much more generous with financial aid than NYU, on par with the rest of the Ivies except Harvard and Princeton which automaticlaly gives full ride to any students making less than 60k
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<p>"At the outset of the fundraising campaign, President Bollinger announced that Columbia would enhance financial aid by eliminating the debt burden on students whose families earn less than $50,000 per year while attending Columbia College and the Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science-replacing loans with grants for these undergraduates beginning in the 2007-2008 academic year."
From: John</a> Kluge</p>