<p>Just post your EFC, whether you are instate or not, and how much financial aid you got. If you could break it down further and separate it into loans and grants, i'd appreciate it. I am still waiting on my aid package as my EFC is $0 and I needed to submit a bunch of extra documents.</p>
<p>@puckhound95: Apologies for adding to your requests, but it would be greatly appreciated if those who’re responding could also list some stats, particularly scores: GPA, SAT, SAT-II, APs. </p>
<p>I am from New Jersey and my household income is $400,000+ (keep in mind that the cost of living in central NJ is well above the national average). I received a $5,500 loan, which is what I was expecting. My stats were very high, as I was accepted into the honors college for bioengineering.</p>
<p>My EFC was 27,000, but realistically I can pay 9k a year. I got a 2160 (800 CR, 700M, 660W), 710 World History, 730 Biology (E). My GPA was 3.48/4.14, and I received the $5,000 Presidential Scholarship (20k over 4 years), as well as the Creative and Performing Arts scholarship which is worth full IS tuition (I am IS).</p>
<p>I know people are trying to be helpful to puckhound95’s question, but it is really safer not to post household income online. </p>
<p>@Twillsmomnp You are absolutely right. It did not even occur to me that posting financial info would be dangerous. Thank you to anyone who posted already though</p>
<p>I too would discourage posting family income, and would be wary about posting efc (which I now recall stands for expected family contribution.) But simply telling whether you were offered a full or a partial scholarship and what stats/scores were might be alright.</p>