Are you eligible for financial aid? Find out by looking at the requirements below. Plus, learn how aid is awarded through a formula based on financial need and educational costs.

Student Eligibility
Financial Need

Student Eligibility
To receive aid from any of the major federal student aid programs, you must meet all of the following criteria:

 

Financial Need

For most of the major programs discussed here—except for unsubsidized Stafford and PLUS loans—aid is awarded on the basis of financial need.

When you apply for federal student aid, the information you report on the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) is used to calculate your Expected Family Contribution (EFC). The formula used to calculate your EFC is established by law and is used to measure your family's financial strength on the basis of your family's income and assets. The EFC is used to determine your eligibility for federal student aid.

If your EFC is below a certain amount and you meet all other eligibility requirements, you'll be eligible for a federal Pell Grant. There isn't a maximum EFC that defines eligibility for the other financial aid programs. Instead, your EFC is used in an equation to determine your financial need:

Cost of Attendance - Expected Family Contribution (EFC)
= Financial Need

The government assigns you a financial aid administrator (FAA), who calculates your cost of attendance (COA), and subtracts the amount you and your family are expected to contribute toward that cost. If there's anything left over, you're considered to have financial need. In determining your need for aid from the student financial aid programs, your FAA must first consider other aid you're expected to receive.

Your FAA can adjust the EFC formula's data elements or adjust your COA if he or she believes your family's financial circumstances warrant it, based on the documentation you provide. However, the FAA does not have to make such an adjustment.

You can see how the EFC is calculated by downloading worksheets from http://ifap.ed.gov/IFAPWebApp/currentEFCInformationPag.jsp or by writing to:

Federal Student Aid Information Center
P.O. Box 84
Washington, DC 20044
(800) 4-FED-AID [(800) 433-3243]

 

Information current as excerpted from the 2002-2003 "Student Guide," prepared by the U.S. Department of Education, and may change per government regulations.