Anonymous wrote:Our EFC was a low number. Private college that said it would meet 100% of demonstrated need looked at our CSS and said we should pay nearly twice our EFC. Kid went to a public college.
Anonymous wrote:First, only the best schools guarantee 100% of needed aid. Second, what you and the school perceive as need may be different. Run the net cost calculator for each school to see how you’d fare. Third, meeting aid is more grants at the best/richest schools and more loans at less selective/poor schools. Also, need-based and merit aid are different.
Anonymous wrote:Not an expert, but you have to complete the FAFSA which tells you your "expected family contribution" or EFC. I assume... and this is where it gets fuzzy because I didn't have this... that if the total costs are over the EFC, that the school would grant you the difference, along with one small federal loan (5500/year). I could be a little off base, my EFC was over the cost of attendance so did not get to see how it worked in reality but the FAFSA is where you start.
Anonymous wrote:OP, each school has a Net Price Calculator (NPC) on its financial aid website. That will give you a much better estimate than trying to make rough guesses. Assets are also considered. You can run the NPCs as many times as you like, anonymously, use different inputs to see what happens, etc.
Anonymous wrote:It means you should have saved more if you are expecting $50K in financial aid.
Anonymous wrote:Let's say your kid wants to go to a school that is $80k a year.
Your HHI is $200k (I'm guessing on a number here...I don't know what the "thresholds" are for getting aid.
Does the school give merit aid assuming your kid has good grades?
Does "meeting financial need" also mean they'll allow your kid to take $50k in loans? (just guessing some exorbitant number here)
Can someone walk me through some scenarios?