What colleges meet 100% of need?

<p>I wondered about the schools you listed. I looked at them briefly and could not see anywhere that said they met full need. In general schools that meet full need are very competitive to get into and, as you already realize, you do not have the stats for such schools. </p>

<p>Calmom’s suggestion of starting with a CC or lower cost public U is a good one. Federal aid will probably cover the cost of most instate CCs. It will probably not cover the cost of most 4 year state schools. (my daughter goes to an instate State U, she has a 0 EFC and it is only because her academic scholarships reduce her need considerably that her full need is able to be met - your stats are low for much in the way of academic scholarships). Very unlikely that your need will be met at out of state Us.</p>

<p>My suggestion would be that you start at a CC in your State that has an agreement with the 4 year instate Us to accept transfer students from the CC (our state has this, I imagine many states have the same). Starting at the CC will keep the costs down considerably. Then if you do really well at the CC then you may be eligible for a transfer scholarship which will help with the costs at the 4 year school. Unfortunately transfer scholarships tend to be quite a bit smaller than freshman scholarships, but every little helps.</p>