Summary of Federal Financial Aid Programs

   Federal Financial Aid can be thought of in two overall catagories.   You can get federal grants which do not have to be repaid.  Most people will still have a financial need in addition to any grant money they may receive. After your grant money you will consider whether to also apply for student loans (which will have to be repaid).
    There are no income ceilings that stop you from receiving financial aid if you are a higher income family.
  

federal programs: grants

     There are several different grant programs.  Most people are aware of the Pell Grant which can be up to $4,700 per year.   There are three other grant programs, in addition to the Pell Grant:

  1. Pell Grant max:  $5,000 per year

  2. Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant (FSEOG)   max:  $4,000 per year

  3. Academic Competitiveness Grant (ACG)         max:  $750 (year one)  $1,500 (year two)

  4. National Smart Grant (SMART) max $4,000 per year















 understanding the different grants

  Pell Grants

There are several factors that will influence the amount of Pell Grant you are awarded. The FASFA form is your application for your Pell Grant and it contains all of the input factors. These input factors will determine the amount of Pell Grant you will receive.  They include your demonstrated need, the cost of the university you will attend, the length of the study program, whether you are full time or just part time student, and the amount of money allocated that year by congress for the Pell program.

  SEOGs

The Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant is awarded on top of the Pell Grant for students with the biggest financial need (from the lowest income families).   All of the students who have the most financial need are pooled together and then the University divides up the SEOG money it has been allocated.   There is never enough money and you should probably expect to receive $1,000 at the most from the SEOG grant, in fact it could be as little as a couple of hundred dollars.    Nationwide something like a million college students are awarded some amount of SEOG each year.

  ACGs

The Academic Competitiveness Grant has a few more qualification requirements the student must meet.  This grant only is for college freshmen and sophmores.    The student must already be receiving a Pell Grant.  Also, an academic achievement level requirement must be met.   For freshmen, they must have attended a high school curriculum known as a rigorous secondary school program of study.   Such a curricullum generally includes:

  • Four years of English;
  • Three years of math, including algebra I and a higher level class such as algebra II, geometry, or data analysis and statistics;
  • Three years of science, including one year each of at least two of the following courses: biology, chemistry, and physics;
  • Three years of social studies; and
  • One year of a language other than English.




For sophmores, they must achieve a 3.0 out of 4.0 or better during their first year to qualify again for the sophmore year ACG grant.

  National Smart Grants

The Smart Grant is available only for the third and fourth years of college.   Most of the requirements are otherwise the same as for the ACG grants.    The one notable different requirment is the field of study.   The student must be pursuing a major in physical, life, or computer sciences, mathematics, technology, engineering or a critical foreign language.   This is not to say there are not smart students in other fields of study.   It is to say that society agrees we have a shortage of math and science experts.  This is one way to incentivize more students to go into these more rigorous fields of study.

the federal student loan program

university

There are a handful of different Student Loan programs to be aware of. The most common is the Stafford Student Loan. The same FAFSA form you filled out to begin with also determines your eligibility for a Stafford Loan. The eligibility requirements are the same as for the Pell grants and other grants. There is an additional requirement that you cannot be in default on any student loans already or else they will not give you another loan.

There are some nice aspects to the Stafford Loans. They have some flexible options when it comes time to repay and setting up your payments. Keep in mind that the student will have to repay this loan, so you do not want to borrow any more than absolutely necessary. One other nice aspect of the Stafford Loan is the low interest rate.

Interest rates for new subsidized Stafford Loans are set by law, as follows:

  • For most loans made before July 1, 2006: Variable rate applies (but with an 8.25% cap).
  • Stafford loans made beginning July 1, 2006: 6.8%.
  • New subsidized Stafford loans to undergraduates beginning July 1, 2008:
    • 6.0% for a loan first disbursed between July 1, 2008, and June 30, 2009
    • 5.6% for a loan first disbursed between July 1, 2009, and June 30, 2010
    • 4.5% for a loan first disbursed between July 1, 2010, and June 30, 2011
    • 3.4% for a loan first disbursed between July 1, 2011, and June 30, 2012


Probably the best thing is that the rate is zero percent until you graduate (or fall below half-time school enrollment status). For the subsidized Stafford Loan you accrue/pay no interest while you are actually in school. You only start getting hit with the interest after graduation.

One negative aspect of a Stafford Loan is that you will have to pay a 1.5% fee of the loan amount. This money is called the "origination and default fees". In plain english that means the profit amount that goes to pay the salaries of the loan processing people at the financial institution. Hopefully these fees will be either lowered or eliminated when the Staffords Loans start coming directly from the federal department of education instead of having an extra middle man at your local financial institution involved in the process sucking up part of the money.

Click here to find the right student loan for you!

The Stafford Loan is the most common, there is also the Perkins Loan. For the Perkins Loan, they are awarded slightly differently. It is also federal loan money to be lent out but the loans are determined by the school itself based on most need. Just about everyone is eligible for a Stafford, but you may or may not have the need level to be able to get a Perkins if you want one. One nice thing about the Perkins is that there is no 1.5% fee you have to pay up front. Also the grace period and repayment period for the Perkins loan are usually longer.

There is one final loan type that you need to be aware of and that is the Parent Plus loan. The Parent Plus is, as the name implies, taken out by the parent and must be repaid by the parent. The first two, the Stafford and the Perkins are loans to the student herself. Some of the same positive aspects apply to the Parent Plus loan. There are flexible repayment options and you get to defer repayment during the time the student is enrolled at least half time in school. Depending on your income level, any interest paid is tax deductible. Two negatives about the Parent Plus are that the interest rate that will kick in on you after the student graduates is slightly higher. Right now it is 8.5%. Also the "origination and default fees" that you get hit with to get the loan are higher, usually 4% of the loan amount.