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Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)
You must submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)
if you want to apply for federal and state financial aid. Many
colleges and universities, especially public institutions, also
require the FAFSA. You must submit the FAFSA every year that you want
aid.
Obtaining a FAFSA
The FAFSA is available in several formats, including online, PDF and
paper versions.
The best option is to complete the web-based version of the FAFSA at
www.fafsa.ed.gov,
known as FAFSA on the Web. It includes step-by-step instructions for
completing the online FAFSA as well as preapplication worksheets. You
can obtain a PIN to electronically sign the form by visiting www.pin.ed.gov. If you have technical
questions about using FAFSA on the Web, call 1-800-4-FED-AID.
FAFSA on the Web offers several benefits, including:
Most families complete the FAFSA online these days.
PDF format FAFSAs
are available in black and white and color versions in both English
and Spanish. These versions of the FAFSA may be printed using the free
Adobe PDF Reader
software. Starting with the 2008-2009 academic year, the PDF FAFSAs
may be submitted for processing by mail. The PDF version will normally
be available starting November 15 of each year.
Paper versions are no longer bulk-distributed to high schools,
colleges and libraries, with a few exceptions. (The exceptions involve
organizations that work with underrepresented populations and students
that do not have access to the Internet or a phone.) However, students
may obtain up to three copies of the paper version by calling
1-800-4-FED-AID (1-800-433-3242) or 1-391-337-5665. (Hearing impaired
individuals should call the TTY number 1-800-730-8913.) Paper FAFSAs
can be ordered starting November 1 of each year.
Note that the FAFSA may not be submitted before January 1, even if the
paper and PDF versions are available sooner.
EFC Calculators
FinAid's Financial Aid Estimation Form
may be used to calculate your EFC and an estimate of your eligibility
for financial aid. This may help you understand a bit about how the
federal need analysis system works. You can also run "what-if"
experiments to see how much aid you'll get under various scenarios.
FinAid also has a QuickEFC
calculator that uses much fewer questions to yield a ballpark estimate
of your EFC.
Like FinAid's EFC calculator, the US Department of Education's
FAFSA4CASTER
tool also provides an early estimate of financial aid eligiblity. It
is similar to FAFSA on the Web, but omits a handful of questions
(e.g., drug conviction, selective service, parent education level,
list of colleges, signatures). The FinAid tool provides more detailed
analysis and more detailed aid eligibility information, but
FAFSA4CASTER will potentially be linked with FAFSA on the Web for
prefilling the answers to some of the FAFSA questions.
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