FAFSA Practice Test

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FAFSA 2025โ€“2026

FAFSA 2025-2026 Changes and Updates

The 2025-2026 FAFSA continues the major changes implemented beginning with the 2024-2025 award year under the FAFSA Simplification Act. These changes represent the most significant redesign of federal student aid in decades โ€” students and families who filed the FAFSA before 2024 will notice substantial differences in how the form works and how aid is calculated.

Key FAFSA Simplification Changes

Simplified form โ€” the number of questions was reduced from approximately 100 to approximately 36 for most applicants, making the FAFSA significantly shorter and easier to complete. Student Aid Index (SAI) โ€” the Expected Family Contribution (EFC) has been renamed the Student Aid Index (SAI). The calculation methodology also changed โ€” more families with low and moderate incomes qualify for higher aid amounts under the new formula. IRS Direct Data Exchange (DDX) โ€” the FAFSA now directly connects with the IRS to automatically import tax information with your consent, replacing the IRS Data Retrieval Tool (DRT). Using DDX significantly reduces errors and the chance of being selected for verification. New Pell Grant formula โ€” more students now qualify for Pell Grants, and students from the lowest-income families may receive larger maximum Pell Grants. Divorced parent rules โ€” the contributor is now the parent who provided more financial support in the past 12 months, not necessarily the parent with whom the student lived. Multiple financial contributors โ€” when students have multiple contributors (divorced parents with joint support, stepparents), each contributor must complete their section separately using their own FSA ID.

FAFSA Online Platform

The FAFSA is completed at studentaid.gov. The redesigned online form includes: guided step-by-step navigation; the ability for multiple contributors (student, parent, stepparent) to each complete their sections independently; automatic status notifications about missing contributor sections; and IRS DDX integration that allows tax data to be pre-populated with consent. The StudentAid mobile app also allows FAFSA completion on iOS and Android devices.

Who Qualifies for Federal Financial Aid

To be eligible for federal student aid through FAFSA, you must meet basic eligibility requirements. Meeting these requirements does not guarantee aid โ€” your specific aid amount depends on financial need, available funds, and the programs you apply for.

Basic Eligibility Requirements

Citizenship or eligible non-citizen status โ€” U.S. citizens and eligible non-citizens (including legal permanent residents and certain other immigration statuses) may receive federal aid. Undocumented and DACA students are not eligible for federal aid. Valid Social Security Number โ€” required for federal aid eligibility. High school diploma, GED, or equivalent โ€” or completion of an approved homeschool program. Enrollment or acceptance in an eligible program at an accredited institution โ€” most colleges, universities, community colleges, trade schools, and career programs are eligible. Satisfactory academic progress โ€” schools require students to maintain minimum GPA and completion rate standards to continue receiving aid. No defaulted federal student loans โ€” students with defaulted federal loans are ineligible for new federal aid until the default is resolved. Registration with Selective Service โ€” male students between 18 and 25 must be registered.

Income and Asset Limits

There are no strict income limits for federal student aid eligibility โ€” even high-income families may qualify for some aid (particularly unsubsidized federal loans). Pell Grant eligibility does phase out based on SAI. Federal student loans (both subsidized and unsubsidized) are available to all eligible students regardless of income. Work-study programs have some financial need requirements. State grants and institutional aid have their own criteria, which may include stricter income thresholds.

FAFSA Practice Test
FAFSA Student Aid Index and EFC
FAFSA Student Aid Index and EFC 2
FAFSA Dependency Status

Pell Grant 2025-2026

The Federal Pell Grant is the largest federal grant program โ€” free money for college that does not need to be repaid. Pell Grant eligibility is determined by your SAI, enrollment status, and the cost of attending your school.

Pell Grant Eligibility Under New Formula

The FAFSA Simplification Act introduced two new types of Pell Grant eligibility: Standard Pell Grant โ€” determined by the SAI calculation as before, based on family income and assets. Maximum Pell Grant โ€” students from families with income at or below 175% of the federal poverty level automatically qualify for the maximum Pell Grant amount, regardless of assets. Zero SAI Pell Grant โ€” students with an SAI of zero may qualify for the maximum Pell Grant. The new formula expanded Pell Grant access โ€” the Department of Education estimates that approximately 100,000 additional students qualify for Pell Grants under the new rules, and many existing recipients receive larger awards.

Pell Grant Amount

The maximum Pell Grant for 2024-2025 was $7,395. The maximum for 2025-2026 will be set by Congress and the Department of Education โ€” check studentaid.gov for the confirmed 2025-2026 maximum. Your actual Pell Grant amount depends on: your SAI (lower SAI = higher grant); your enrollment status (full-time students receive more than part-time); your Cost of Attendance at your school (Pell cannot exceed the cost of attendance). Pell Grants are renewable each year you maintain eligibility โ€” students have a lifetime limit of 12 semesters (or equivalent) of Pell Grant eligibility. Part-time students receive proportionally less โ€” a half-time student receives approximately 50% of the full-time award.

Year-Round Pell Grants

Students who receive Pell Grants for both fall and spring semesters may also be eligible for a Pell Grant for a summer semester โ€” allowing year-round enrollment without losing aid. Year-round Pell is available to students who enroll at least half-time in a summer session and have remaining Pell Grant eligibility. This allows motivated students to accelerate their degree completion by taking summer courses paid for with Pell funds.

FAFSA 2025-2026 Deadlines

The FAFSA has multiple deadlines โ€” federal, state, and institutional. Meeting only the federal deadline may cause you to miss significant state and institutional aid that has earlier deadlines.

Federal FAFSA Deadline

The federal deadline for the 2025-2026 FAFSA is June 30, 2026 โ€” the last day of the award year. However, your school may have its own earlier institutional deadline. Always check both the federal deadline and your school's specific deadline.

State FAFSA Deadlines 2025-2026

State grant deadlines are typically much earlier than the federal deadline โ€” many states award state grants on a first-come, first-served basis until funds run out. Key state deadlines for 2025-2026: California (Cal Grant) โ€” initial deadline March 2, 2025; Texas (TEXAS Grant) โ€” submit FAFSA by January 15, 2025 for priority consideration; New York (TAP) โ€” file by April 30, 2026; Illinois (MAP Grant) โ€” awards made based on date of application until funds are exhausted โ€” apply in October; North Carolina โ€” August 1, 2025 for returning students. Always check your specific state's deadline at studentaid.gov or your state's higher education authority website โ€” deadlines change annually.

Institutional (College) Deadlines

Many colleges have institutional FAFSA priority deadlines โ€” often in November, December, or February โ€” after which institutional grant and scholarship funds may be depleted. Priority deadlines are particularly important at colleges that offer significant merit and need-based institutional aid. Check each school's financial aid page for their specific priority deadline. Missing the priority deadline doesn't prevent you from filing โ€” you can still receive federal aid โ€” but institutional aid may be significantly reduced.

Common FAFSA Mistakes to Avoid

The FAFSA is a legal document โ€” errors can delay your aid or result in incorrect aid amounts. These are the most common mistakes families make.

Income and Asset Reporting Errors

Using the wrong tax year โ€” the 2025-2026 FAFSA uses 2023 tax year data. Do not use 2024 tax information even if it is more current. Using IRS DDX eliminates most tax year confusion. Not reporting untaxed income โ€” child support, veterans' benefits, and certain other untaxed income must be reported even if not shown on tax returns. Incorrectly reporting assets โ€” retirement accounts (401k, IRA) are NOT counted as assets on the FAFSA. Regular savings, checking, and investment accounts ARE reported. The value of your home is not counted (for federal FAFSA โ€” some state forms count home equity). Reporting the wrong parent โ€” under the new rules, divorced parents must report the parent who provided more financial support in the past 12 months, not necessarily the custodial parent.

FSA ID Errors

Using the same email address for student and parent FSA IDs โ€” student and parent must have separate email addresses and separate FSA IDs. Mismatching Social Security Numbers โ€” the SSN on the FSA ID must exactly match the SSN used on the FAFSA. Even one-digit errors cause significant delays. Not creating FSA IDs in advance โ€” FSA ID creation can take several days if identity verification is pending. Create FSA IDs at least one week before you plan to submit.

School Selection and Submission Errors

Not listing all schools โ€” add every school you are considering. Schools only see your information if you add them; adding a school does not commit you to attending. Not submitting on time โ€” the FAFSA is not complete until it is submitted; saving a draft does not count. Verify your submission with the confirmation email and confirmation number. Not re-filing each year โ€” FAFSA does not automatically renew; you must re-file every year to maintain financial aid.

File October 1 โ€” Don't Wait for January or February
The single biggest FAFSA mistake families make is waiting to file. Many students and parents wait until the new year or until college application decisions are made in the spring โ€” by which time state grant funds may already be committed to earlier applicants. The FAFSA opens October 1 and uses prior-year tax data that is already available โ€” you don't need to wait for a new tax return. File in October or November to maximize state and institutional aid. The difference between filing in October versus February can be thousands of dollars in state and institutional grants.
Create FSA IDs for student and parent (separate IDs) at studentaid.gov before October 1
Open the 2025-2026 FAFSA at studentaid.gov on or after October 1, 2024
Consent to IRS Direct Data Exchange to automatically import 2023 tax data
Report current savings, checking, and investment balances โ€” not retirement account balances
Add all colleges you are considering โ€” up to 20 schools on the online form
Divorced families: determine which parent provided more financial support in the past 12 months
Submit by your state's priority FAFSA deadline โ€” many states award aid first-come, first-served
Check your FAFSA Submission Summary for your SAI and any errors
Respond to verification requests promptly if selected โ€” do not delay
Re-file FAFSA every October for subsequent academic years
Free FAFSA - Free Application for Federal Student Aid Test
FAFSA Dependency Status 2
FAFSA Dependency Status 3

When did the 2025-2026 FAFSA open?

The 2025-2026 FAFSA opened on October 1, 2024. The FAFSA always opens October 1 for the following academic year. For example, the 2026-2027 FAFSA will open October 1, 2025. Filing as early as possible after October 1 is strongly recommended to maximize state and institutional aid, much of which is awarded on a first-come, first-served basis.

What tax year does the 2025-2026 FAFSA use?

The 2025-2026 FAFSA uses 2023 tax year information โ€” your most recently filed federal tax return as of October 1, 2024. This is called 'prior-prior year' tax data. The IRS Direct Data Exchange (DDX) allows the FAFSA to automatically import this information from the IRS with your consent, which is the recommended approach to avoid errors.

What is the difference between SAI and EFC?

The Student Aid Index (SAI) replaced the Expected Family Contribution (EFC) beginning with the 2024-2025 award year under the FAFSA Simplification Act. Both serve the same purpose โ€” determining your financial need and federal aid eligibility โ€” but the calculation methodology changed. Key differences: the SAI can be negative (down to -1,500), indicating maximum need; the EFC could not go below zero. More families qualify for Pell Grants under the SAI formula. The divorced parent rule changed (now based on financial support rather than custody). The SAI formula generally provides more aid to lower and middle-income families than the EFC formula did.

Do I need to report my retirement savings on FAFSA?

No โ€” retirement accounts (401k, 403b, IRA, Roth IRA, pension plans) are not reported as assets on the federal FAFSA. The FAFSA only counts current savings, checking, and investment accounts (stocks, bonds, mutual funds) as student and parent assets. This is an important distinction โ€” families who have substantial retirement savings but lower liquid assets will not have those retirement funds counted against their financial aid eligibility.

Can I update my FAFSA after submitting it?

Yes โ€” you can make corrections to your FAFSA at studentaid.gov after submission if information changes or if you made an error. Log in with your FSA ID and select 'Make FAFSA Corrections.' Schools will be notified of the correction and will update your financial aid accordingly. Note that correcting income information may require reprocessing and could affect your aid package. If your financial situation changed significantly (job loss, divorce), contact your school's financial aid office about a professional judgment review rather than simply correcting the FAFSA.

How does FAFSA affect merit scholarships?

Federal FAFSA-based aid is separate from merit scholarships, which are based on academic achievement, talent, or other criteria rather than financial need. However, completing the FAFSA is often required even for merit scholarships at colleges โ€” some colleges require FAFSA to be filed as a condition of receiving any institutional aid, including merit awards. Additionally, colleges use FAFSA information to calculate the need-based component of financial aid packages that are combined with merit awards. Always complete the FAFSA even if you primarily expect to receive merit-based aid.
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