Understanding and Appealing Financial Aid Award Letters

For gardeners, April showers bring May flowers. For high school seniors, the bloom may already be off the rose. The joy of getting college acceptance letters often quickly fades as the reality of comparing colleges and determining “the one” comes into focus.

A great college fit means finding the best collective academic, social, and financial match. But what happens if the academic and social fit are great, but the financial fit is not?

Financial aid award letters

Here are some tips for evaluating financial aid award letters and what to do if they fall short.

Financial aid award letters consist of one or more of these three types of aid:

It’s important to understand:

Unmet need

Once you know what the college is offering and the amount of unmet need you are facing, it’s time to be very realistic about how to pay the college bill:

Appealing for more financial aid

If the college offers a financial aid package that falls short, the student may appeal the financial aid decision. Here are seven tips to help you increase the financial aid award:

  1. When asking to be considered for more aid, be polite and courteous — don’t be confrontational.
    • Frame communications as a request for reconsideration.
    • Don’t use the word “negotiate”.
    • Understand that fact-based requests outlining changes in the family’s financial circumstances are more likely to result in success than emotional “we need more” arguments.
  2. Know the process the school uses to reconsider aid.
    • Contact the financial aid office to ask about how to appeal for more aid.
    • Odds for a successful appeal are better at colleges with more substantial endowments, such as private colleges and flagship public universities.
  3. Review your FAFSA and/or CSS Profile submissions.
    • Check for mistakes that may have been made in the rush to file.
    • Consider the possibility you overstated assets or lost significant assets since filing.
  4. Ask a financial aid administrator if your tax deductions were counted as income.
    • Some schools do not accept all tax deductions and view some as untaxed income.
    • If you know which deductions the school converted to income, it may be possible that your actual financial need is greater than they think.
  5. Write a letter documenting any “special circumstances” and/or changes in your family’s situation since your FAFSA and CSS Profile were submitted, such as:
    • Divorce
    • Death of a wage earner
    • Unexpected, unreimbursed medical bills or costs associated with caring for children with special needs
    • Tuitions for private elementary or secondary schools
    • One-time retirement in the Base Year
    • Necessary major home repairs, such as roof, heating or windows
  6. Schedule a follow-up meeting or phone call to make your appeal directly to the financial aid administrator.
  7. For new students, showing a more generous financial aid package from a different school may be helpful.
    • It may be possible to get the schools to compete and offer you more aid.
    • It is also likely that the school will look at another school’s offer simply to obtain competitive information about their financial aid process.

More help

Some college admissions and financial experts such as College Affordable and My College Planning Team assist families in appealing financial aid awards. Be sure to understand the terms and costs for their services.

The Last Word

Understanding the components of a financial aid award letter will help you determine if a college is a good financial fit for you and your family. Appealing an award letter which may be insufficient could be the difference between attending a college that is affordable or one that requires you and your student to reach too far by taking on too much student loan debt. Although a decision about how much of the school’s scarce aid they are willing to allocate to your student was made with the initial award, it does not mean that is the final decision. Circumstances can change for both you and the school. A student’s fact-based appeal and/or a change at the school, i.e. a student to whom the school allocated free-money aid decides not to attend, could result in a more generous financial aid package for your family.

For more college financial planning measures, please visit https://www.scstudentloan.org/resources