Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Law school need based aid is intended only for students coming from real poverty. Merit aid is available if you are willing to go to a lower ranked school.
I was in my 30s and had been married for several years when I went to law school. They still wanted my parents' financial information on order for me to apply for loans. It was beyond ridiculous and my parents didn't want to give me their private information, and I can't blame them. Parent info shouldn't be required if you aren't seeking need based aid.
Not true to the best of my knowledge.
The most elite law schools (Harvard, Yale, & Stanford) offer only need-based aid for which many students qualify & receive.
OP: You need to research which law schools offer need-based aid as I believe that it is not common.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't remember parental income being considered at all when I applied back in the late 90s. Am I remembering this incorrectly? My parents did not pay any of the tuition.
When I went in the 90s my parents' income was considered - I didn't get financial aid. I did get offered merit scholarships at some great T20 schools and like a total idiot decided to take out full loans to go to Columbia instead. My parents didn't pay any of my law school loans; they had covered college.
How long did it take you to repay your student loans ?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't remember parental income being considered at all when I applied back in the late 90s. Am I remembering this incorrectly? My parents did not pay any of the tuition.
When I went in the 90s my parents' income was considered - I didn't get financial aid. I did get offered merit scholarships at some great T20 schools and like a total idiot decided to take out full loans to go to Columbia instead. My parents didn't pay any of my law school loans; they had covered college.
Anonymous wrote:I don't remember parental income being considered at all when I applied back in the late 90s. Am I remembering this incorrectly? My parents did not pay any of the tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Law school need based aid is intended only for students coming from real poverty. Merit aid is available if you are willing to go to a lower ranked school.
I was in my 30s and had been married for several years when I went to law school. They still wanted my parents' financial information on order for me to apply for loans. It was beyond ridiculous and my parents didn't want to give me their private information, and I can't blame them. Parent info shouldn't be required if you aren't seeking need based aid.
Anonymous wrote:DC did qualify for a law school scholarship (and loans covered the remainder). There was a place for DC to note that they were 100% responsible for their expenses.
We only had to provide our data for the first year. DC's scholarship is not going to change over the 3 years, unlike the loans which must be applied for annually.
Anonymous wrote:He should consider moving somewhere with an instate option he’d be happy with and using that gap year to establish residency or consider taking two gap years if that will establish residency (takes that long in some states).
You cannot claim him as a dependent in any way on your tax return (even for the other dependent credit) and he will need to file his own separate return.
I was able to establish residency in VA after one year and get in state tuition for law school.
Anonymous wrote:We're an older couple who have saved diligently and worked past many people's target retirement age in order to pay for our children's college.
Our youngest child is leaving for college in 2 years just as my husband turns 71.
Our oldest will graduate college and after a gap year wants to attend law school. We've told him that he'll have to pay for any grad school himself through loans. He'll have a pretty small income in his gap year, and will be applying as an independent but fairly broke 23 year old young man.
Is it true that our assets and income would be factored into the older one's application for need-based financial aid to law school?
That's what it looks like from my looking over the admissions pages of his law school wish list. Which seems pretty unfair. Even though we'll have a lifetime of savings stored up to get us through retirement, 4% of our net worth isn't going to afford us a lavish retirement. We can't dilute it to pay for another round of expensive education. And would rather not sell our home.
Thanks for advice!
Anonymous wrote:He'll likely have a 3.8 and 170 LSAT. Is that enough for merit aid?