| If we don’t think we’ll get needs based assistance? Do we have to look school by school for the answer? And does FAFSA have to be in when applications are due? Help a beginner out! |
| Some schools require it for merit scholarships. |
| We knew we would not receive aid (and merit scholarships were not going to change our child’s first choice) so my kid did not. |
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No
We are full pay- never did. No matter how we played the calculators under no scenario would we get any $ for our kids. |
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Thank you for the responses so far. I’m trying to understand the timing of merit decisions (which seem to be communicated with an admission letter) and the FAFSA.
The FAFSA is due later than admissions and merit would be awarded, isn’t it? Why would the FAFSA still be required then? For those who responded: did your kids get merit awards? |
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I am by no means an expert, and I’m sure someone will correct me if I’m wrong…
But, yes, you need to look school by school. Some schools automatically consider you for merit. Some schools require Fafsa for merit consideration. If you want loans, you need to fill out fafsa. But the deadline is later. If you want work study or school grants/scholarships, you need to submit it earlier. Some fafsa deadlines are Nov 15, some Dec 1, some in January - it all depends on if you’re applying ED/EA/RD. Look at each school website. |
same we never did. kid got lots of merit at case, pitt, cu-boulder, elon, vermont, and more. |
| Thanks for asking this question OP. We are in the same situation, and I'm also confused whether we need to fill out FAFSA or put down social security numbers, etc. |
Didn't do SSN either. If you don't believe you will get aid (run the NPC), then don't fill in SSN at all. No point. It will show up N/A and not xxx-xx-xxxx Not sure one is better, but with even Emory moving away from need blind to need-aware, I'd imagine others are conscious of bottom lines too. Who knows how that will bias the AO. |
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I was confused as well, because I was told some merit was contingent on filling those out, so I did the FAFSA and CSS just to be safe. In the window to list total assets, our number didn't fit, so I followed directions and entered 999999, or whatever it was. Of course I knew going in that we would never get financial aid, but I didn't know they would actually ask for a number.
DS did get merit aid, and he was accepted at all targets and safeties... but not reaches. So his outcome was the expected one, and I have no way to know whether filling those out and thereby disclosing our wealth helped, hindered, or did absolutely nothing. No idea if I should do the same for DD...
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So out of curiosity, what was the financial aid package they offered? Loans? |
| You fill out FAFSA only if the schools require one for merit aid consideration. Some schools do, some don't. My kids went to UMDCP which did not require one for merit scholarships. I think one of the PPs upthread already answered your question |
So it was invasive? |
No financial aid, we were not eligible. He received various sums in merit at certain safeties (ex: 17K off 50K at St John's College), and 20K off GW's 85K cost of attendance. Since he happened to love GW anyway, he went there. His state school offered him 1K in merit, just for the first year - it was kind of funny and also a little insulting
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Both forms asked about income and assets, which to me is not invasive, considering they're ostensibly for reducing your financial contribution to college costs. I wasn't using them for that reason. I just wanted to fill them out so DS could be eligible for merit aid. Theoretically, need-blind schools aren't even supposed to look at them before making admission decisions. But now I'm wondering. |