The FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid) is the gateway to grants, work-study, and federal student loans. Filling it out correctly — and strategically — can mean the difference between getting $2,000 and $15,000 in free money per year.
Most students fill it out, hope for the best, and accept whatever they get. Here's how to do better.
The FAFSA opens on October 1 each year for the following school year. Many state grants and institutional aid programs are first-come, first-served. Filing in October vs. March can literally mean thousands of dollars more in grants.
Set a calendar reminder for October 1. Have your documents ready. File within the first two weeks if possible.
The difference is real: Some states exhaust their grant funding by December. Students who file in February or later may get zero state grant money simply because the pool is empty.
The FAFSA isn't a one-time thing. You need to file every year to stay eligible for federal aid. Your financial situation may change — a parent losing a job, a sibling starting college, your own income changing — and filing ensures your aid package reflects your current reality.
Even if you think you won't qualify, file anyway. It costs nothing and takes 30 minutes. You might be surprised.
The FAFSA lets you pull your tax information directly from the IRS into the application. Use this feature. It's faster, reduces errors, and makes your application less likely to be selected for verification (a tedious process where the school audits your application).
The FAFSA asks you to list schools you're applying to. Some evidence suggests that the school listed first may consider you a higher priority for institutional aid. Whether this is officially true or not, it costs you nothing to put your top choice first.
You can list up to 20 schools on the FAFSA. List every school you're considering — there's no downside, and it ensures you're eligible for aid at each one.
The FAFSA uses your family's income and assets to calculate your Student Aid Index (SAI) — formerly called EFC. Lower SAI = more aid. Here's what you should know:
What counts against you:
What does NOT count:
Strategic tip: If your parents are planning to make large purchases or pay down debt, doing so before filing the FAFSA reduces reported cash/savings on the application. This is legal and smart planning — not gaming the system.
If you have a sibling who is also in college (or starting college), the FAFSA formula adjusts. Having multiple children in college at the same time can significantly reduce your SAI and increase your aid eligibility. Make sure this is accurately reported.
This is the most underused strategy. If your aid package doesn't reflect your actual financial need, you can appeal. Reasons schools accept appeals:
How to appeal:
About 25% of students who appeal get additional aid. The worst they can say is no — and you're exactly where you started.
Many students and families assume they earn "too much" for financial aid. This is a mistake. Here's why:
Filing takes 30 minutes. The potential upside is thousands of dollars. There is no reason not to file.
These errors can delay your application or reduce your aid:
| When | What to Do |
|---|---|
| September | Gather tax documents, create FSA IDs (studentaid.gov) |
| October 1 | File the FAFSA immediately |
| November–January | Check for state grant deadlines (varies by state) |
| February–April | Receive aid packages from schools. Compare them. |
| April–May | Appeal if needed. Accept your best package. |
The FAFSA is free money sitting on the table. File early, file every year, and don't accept your first offer as final. A 30-minute form and a 10-minute phone call to financial aid could save you tens of thousands over your college career.
Financial aid is step one. Build a complete college budget to make every dollar count, or read our guide to graduating debt-free.