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Financing Education Beyond High School. University of Puget Sound November 1, 2012. Financing Your Education . How to apply How eligibility is determined What aid is available. Financial Aid Application Process. Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)
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Financing Education Beyond High School University of Puget Sound November 1, 2012
Financing Your Education • How to apply • How eligibility is determined • What aid is available
Financial Aid Application Process • Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) • Check each school’s financial aid website for applications required: • FAFSA, CSS Profile, Institutional Application • Application deadlines
FAFSA on the Web • Web site: www.fafsa.gov • 2013-14 FAFSA available on January 1, 2013 • Tip: Do not go to www.fafsa.com! • The FAFSA is FREE • Apply for FAFSA PINS: Student AND Parent • IRS DATA RETRIEVAL
What Information is Reported? • Student income and asset values • Parent income and asset values • Income reported is from previous year’s federal tax return • Untaxed income (child support received, voluntary contributions to retirement plan) • Household size • Number of dependents attending college at least half-time
Reporting Income • Income based on federal tax return • For 2013-14 school year, use 2012 tax return • Okay to estimate until you have filed your return • Wages (from W-2), AGI, Taxes Paid, Business Income, Capitol Gains • Untaxed Income
Reporting Assets • Cash, Savings and Checking acct. balances as of date FAFSA signed • Net Investment and Real Estate values, including college savings, trust funds, vacation properties, etc. • Do not include primary residence or funds held in retirement accounts (IRA, 401K, etc) • Investment farm value • Net Business value only if over 100 employees
Corrections If a correction to applicant data is needed, the correction may be made: • www.fafsa.gov if student has a PIN; or • By the school • IRS Data Retrieval-when taxes are completed
How Will My School(s) Receive my FAFSA? • Can list up to 10 schools on FAFSA on web • FAFSA data will be electronically transmitted to all schools listed • Each School is required to review the data for all admitted students, and to calculate eligibility for federal student aid
Expected Family Contribution EFC =Expected Family Contribution • Calculated using a formula established by Congress • Results in a dollar value between $0 and $99,999 • Not a prediction of how much cash you actually have on hand. Rather, it's the best estimate of your capacity (over time) to absorb the costs of education.
Cost of Attendance (COA) • Tuition and Fees • Room and Board • Books and Supplies • Personal Expenses • Travel Expenses
Definition of Need Cost of Attendance (COA) – Expected Family Contribution (EFC) = Financial Need
Financial Need Examples: EFC $12,000 • Puget Sound • COA $53,940 - EFC $12,000 = $41,940 Need • UW-WA Resident • COA $26,066 - EFC $12,000 = $14,066 Need • The EFC is not necessarily the amount of money you will have to pay each year. • Private colleges might offer you grants and scholarships not offered by a public college, and you may find that a private college is more affordable, or at least comparable to a public college • TIP: If finances are critical, it is important to apply to a variety of colleges and compare aid offers
What Types of Financial Aid ? • Grants • Scholarships • Loans • Work-Study
Sources of Aid • Federal, State, Institutional, Private • Private universities have their own institutional scholarships and grants funded through their endowments • Public universities may or may not offer institutional scholarships and grants
Federal Aid • Pell Grant • SEOG (Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant) • Federal Work-Study • Perkins Loan for students • Stafford Loan for students • Plus Loan for parents Detailed descriptions in The Student Guide http://studentaid.ed.gov
State Financial Aid • Washington State Need Grant: for low income families • State Work Study
Stafford Loans (Subsidized and Unsubsidized) • Subsidized Stafford: Must demonstrate “need” (3.4% 2012-13 fixed interest rate) • Unsubsidized Stafford: Need is not a consideration (6.8% 2012-13 fixed interest rate) • Base annual loan limits (combined subsidized and unsubsidized) • $5,500 for 1st year undergraduates • $6,500 for 2nd year undergraduates • $7,500 for each remaining undergraduate year
Work-Study • Undergraduate students are eligible • Employment may be on or off campus • Hours average 10-12 hours/week • Great way to cover personal expenses and develop valuable job skills
Scholarships • Institutional scholarships and grants vary by college and are typically funded through donor and alumni support • Merit scholarships based on review of academic profile to include H.S. GPA, Rigor of coursework completed, and SAT/ACT scores • The more time you invest in scholarship searches the more likely you will receive something. No time/effort = no money. Make the effort!
Private Scholarships • Private Scholarships are available from a wide variety of sources, including employers, clubs, community organizations, credit unions and even your own high school. (i.e. Elks, Rotary, Kiwanis) • MIGHT result in decreased aid from other areas, especially if you are admitted to college that “meets full need”. • Don’t ever pay for a scholarship search!!
Private Scholarship Search • Free Internet scholarship search engines: • GoCollege.com: The Collegiate Websource – http://www.gocollege.com • Fast Web www.fastweb.com • College Board Scholarship Search http://apps.collegeboard.com/cbsearch_ss/welcome.jsp • TIP: open a separate yahoo account for scholarship search email. Online searches generate a lot of mail.
Other Options • Parent PLUS Loan • (7.9% fixed interest rate) • Monthly Payment Plan • Balance is divided into 10 monthly payments. • Fee. • Consider a combination of the PLUS parent loan and a payment plan
Special Circumstances Let your college know if you experience: • Loss of employment, or reduction in income • Unusually high out-of-pocket medical expenses, not including insurance premiums • Tuition for siblings attending private K-12
TIPS • Apply to at least 5 colleges if finances are very important. Aid packages will vary. • Compare costs to aid package to determine net amount you will pay. Use that number when comparing aid offers. Private college might turn out to be comparable to public college. • Examine total loan debt you will have to repay once you graduate!
NET PRICE CALCULATOR • All schools must provide a Net Price Calculator • Net Price Calculator is an estimate,based on specific questions, of what a student’s aid package could be at that particular school. • www.pugetsound.edu/sfs