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Boston Herald
Boston Herald
16 Aug 2023
Nerdwallet


NextImg:How the FAFSA simplification can impact your financial aid

By Trea Branch | NerdWallet

For the first time in 40 years, students will see a completely revamped Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). These changes are part of the FAFSA Simplification Act and should benefit most families, but some households could see their eligible aid decrease significantly, experts say.

“Overall, I think there are a lot more winners,” says MorraLee Keller, senior director of strategic programming at the National College Attainment Network, a nonprofit organization supporting college affordability. On the other hand, Keller says she doesn’t want to underestimate the negative impact those changes may have on some families.

The FAFSA Simplification Act aims to streamline the application process, remove barriers for key student populations and expand federal aid eligibility. Notable changes to the FAFSA include:

The long-awaited changes will launch in December 2023.

The Department of Education is changing how a family’s need-based aid is calculated. As a result, more households could receive more aid.

Before FAFSA simplification: A family’s need was calculated using the Expected Family Contribution (EFC). The EFC incorporated income and assets, family size and the number of children currently enrolled in college. Typically, the lower the EFC, the more aid you’d be eligible for.

After the FAFSA simplification: The EFC is being replaced by the Student Aid Index (SAI). And similar to the EFC, the lower the SAI, the more aid you’ll be eligible for. But the new formula increases the income protection allowance — allowing for more of a student’s or family’s income to be excluded from the calculation.

For example, using the EFC, the parent income protection allowance for a family of four for the 2023-24 academic year is $32,610. For the 2024-25 school year, the same family can exclude $35,870 — protecting an additional $3,260 from their income calculation and lowering the student’s SAI.

Moving away from the EFC to the SAI, it will be easier for some households to show the magnitude of their financial need.

Before FAFSA simplification: Students from a household with limited income and assets could, at the lowest limit, receive an EFC of zero. If your EFC was zero, you were automatically eligible for the maximum amount of federal student aid.

How it works:

Cost of attendance – EFC = Financial need

For example, if your school’s cost of attendance is $20,000 and your EFC is zero, you would be eligible for $20,000 in need-based aid.

After FAFSA simplification: Unlike the EFC, the new SAI calculation can drop below zero. The SAI can be as low as negative $1,500. A family with significantly fewer financial resources could receive more aid in the 2024-25 academic year than they were eligible to receive in the 2023-24 school year.

How it works:

Cost of attendance – SAI = Financial need

Using the example above, having a $20,000 cost of attendance and an SAI of negative $1,500, you could be eligible for $21,500 in need-based aid — an increase of $1,500.

The SAI calculation also makes it easier to qualify for the Pell Grant:

Families with more than one child in college at the same time will no longer receive a sibling discount.

Before FAFSA simplification: The contribution for parents with multiple children in college was divided by the number of children enrolled. This was based on the idea that a parent’s ability to pay for college doesn’t increase as they have more children enrolled, according to the Department of Education.

Using an example from the Department of Education, a parent with one dependent in college full time could have an EFC of $10,000. When their second child enrolls, that child’s EFC would be $5,000. If they have three children enrolled, the third child would have an EFC of $3,333, and so on.

After FAFSA simplification: The SAI does not consider the number of children enrolled in college when determining the parent’s contribution.

For some families, particularly those with incomes and assets between $75,000 and $200,000, the impact of removing the sibling discount could be large. Their eligibility for financial aid could be cut by thousands of dollars, explained Phillip Levine, an economics professor at Wellesley College.

All changes to the FAFSA will be in place for the 2024-25 academic year, but you don’t have to wait to take action. Use the federal student aid estimator to see what you’ll be eligible to receive.

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Trea Branch writes for NerdWallet. Email: tbranch@nerdwallet.com.