Grants
Grants generally do not need to be repaid, although eligibility, enrollment and other requirements may apply.
Gift aidUnderstand grants, scholarships, work-study, student loans, college costs and financial-aid offers before deciding what a school may truly cost and how much borrowing may be required.
Colleges may present aid differently. Compare the full estimated cost, grants and scholarships, work-study, loans, family contribution and the amount that remains. Also verify which awards can be renewed after the first year.
Aid packages may combine several kinds of assistance. Each category affects the student’s cost differently.
Grants generally do not need to be repaid, although eligibility, enrollment and other requirements may apply.
Gift aidScholarships may come from the college, government, employers, foundations or community organizations.
Check renewal rulesWork-study provides an opportunity to earn money through eligible employment rather than an automatic reduction to the bill.
Earned through workLoans are borrowed funds that generally must be repaid. Review the borrower, loan type, interest, fees and repayment terms.
Borrowed moneySubmitting the FAFSA form is an important step, but schools may request additional documents, corrections, verification or separate scholarship applications.
Review FAFSA InformationGather the information required for federal, state and college-specific applications.
Complete the form for the appropriate academic year and check the submission for missing or incorrect information.
Confirm deadlines, supplemental forms, verification requests and separate scholarship applications.
Separate grants, scholarships, work-study, student loans, parent loans and any remaining amount.
Confirm renewal conditions, billing details, loan terms and how enrollment or housing changes could affect the offer.
Enter annual amounts from each financial-aid offer. The worksheet calculates gift aid, remaining cost, borrowing and simple four-year projections.
Amounts stay in your browser and are not submitted to CampusGrader.
| Annual Category | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total estimated cost Tuition, fees, housing, food, books, travel and personal costs | |||
| Grants Federal, state, institutional or other grants | |||
| Scholarships College, private, employer or community awards | |||
| Work-study Potential earnings from eligible employment | |||
| Student loans Federal or private loans in the student’s name | |||
| Parent loans Loans offered to or expected from a parent borrower | |||
| Savings and family contribution Amount available without additional borrowing | |||
| Total gift aid Grants plus scholarships | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Net price before work or loans Estimated cost minus gift aid | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Annual borrowing Student loans plus parent loans | $0 | $0 | $0 |
| Remaining uncovered cost Cost left after entered aid, work, loans and family contribution | $0 | $0 | $0 |
Review the expected length of the program and estimate how tuition, fees, housing, transportation and financial aid may change. Ask whether scholarships remain fixed while college costs increase.
Identify the borrower, interest treatment, fees, limits and repayment protections before accepting any loan.
A federal student loan for eligible undergraduate students with financial need.
A federal student loan for eligible students that is not based on demonstrated financial need.
A federal loan that may be available to an eligible parent of a dependent undergraduate student.
A loan from a private lender with terms set by that lender.
Direct questions can uncover costs, conditions or assumptions that are not obvious from the total award.
When documented financial circumstances have changed, contact the college’s financial-aid office. The school can explain whether an appeal, special-circumstances review or professional-judgment process may apply.
Review Official GuidanceAsk what process the financial-aid office uses and which circumstances it can review.
Examples may include income loss, unusual expenses, family changes or information that no longer reflects the current situation.
The school may request records that support the circumstances being reviewed.
A review does not guarantee that eligibility or the aid offer will change.
Borrowing can help cover educational expenses, but it does not reduce the college’s price. Review the amount borrowed each year, who is legally responsible and the possible total by graduation.
Use official resources alongside financial-aid offers and direct conversations with each college.
Review official information on the FAFSA form, grants, work-study, federal loans and managing federal aid.
Visit StudentAid.govReview U.S. Department of Education data on college costs, completion, debt, repayment and post-college earnings.
Review College ScorecardUse consumer-focused resources for comparing offers, planning borrowing and understanding the financial path to graduation.
Review CFPB ResourcesReview cost alongside academics, housing, safety, campus life and career support before choosing a school.
Read the College GuideShare an honest college experience covering affordability, financial pressure, academic value, housing, campus life and career preparation. Reviews are moderated before they affect public results.