Three deadlines hang over every FAFSA filer, and the one most people remember is the wrong one. The federal deadline is June 30 of the year after the award year ends, which is famously generous, but it is also famously useless for the average student because state and college funds are already gone by then. This guide is about the other two deadlines, the ones that actually decide whether you get a state grant or a polite rejection letter. State priority deadlines for the 2025-26 cycle range from January 9 in some places to July 1 in others, with most clustering in February, March, and April. Miss them and you keep your federal Pell and loans, but the state grant money simply does not show up.
For 2025-26 specifically, two things make timing weird. First, the
FAFSA opened on December 1, 2024 instead of the traditional October 1, because the U.S. Department of Education was still finishing the simplified form. Several states responded by extending their priority deadlines to give applicants more breathing room, while others held the line. So the deadline you remember from a sibling who applied two years ago may not be the deadline that applies to you now. Always check the current cycle, not last year's calendar. Second, a few states quietly shifted from soft priority dates to hard cutoffs, meaning late filers do not even get a partial award.
This page walks through the headline states for the 2025-26 cycle: Florida, California, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Texas, Tennessee, Georgia, Virginia, Colorado, and Nevada, plus how the federal date relates to the state and school dates layered on top. If you treat the earliest deadline in your state as the real one, the federal piece takes care of itself. Pair this with the broader
FAFSA by state directory if you also want a map of state aid programs, not just the dates.
FAFSA 2025-26 Deadlines at a Glance
Dec 1
FAFSA 2025-26 opened (delayed from October 1)
Jun 30
Federal FAFSA deadline for the 2025-26 award year, June 30, 2026
Mar 2
California Cal Grant priority deadline, every cycle
Apr 15
Florida Bright Futures application deadline for graduating seniors
Start by separating the three kinds of dates you will see online and ignore the ones that do not apply to you. The
federal FAFSA deadline for the 2025-26 cycle is June 30, 2026. If you submit anything before that, the federal Office of Federal Student Aid will still process your form and you can still receive Pell Grant, Direct Subsidized and Unsubsidized Loans, PLUS Loans, and federal work-study for the academic year that ran from summer 2025 through summer 2026. Corrections to that FAFSA must be made by September 10, 2026. After June 30, 2026 the form simply closes for that award year.
The
state priority deadline is the cutoff your state agency sets to be considered for state-funded grants and scholarships using your FAFSA data. The state keeps reading FAFSAs after that date, but priority cycles have already happened and most grant programs operate on first-come, first-served funding pools that are usually empty by spring. Twelve to fifteen states publish an explicit suspension or final state-aid deadline. Others just say 'apply as early as possible' and let the funding decide.
The
school priority deadline is the one your specific college sets to award its own institutional grants and work-study. These are often January or February cutoffs, even when the state and federal deadlines are months later. Each campus sets its own date and publishes it on the financial aid page, so check the schools you applied to individually. The college deadline is the one that controls institutional need-based grants, merit aid renewals, and on-campus work-study seats, none of which is federal or state money. If you remember only one rule, remember this: file by your earliest of the three, and you will hit all three.
FAFSA 2025-26 opens: December 1, 2024 (delayed from the traditional October 1 because of the simplified-form rollout).
Federal submission deadline: June 30, 2026 at 11:59 PM Central Time. This is the absolute last day to submit a new 2025-26 FAFSA.
Federal correction deadline: September 10, 2026 at 11:59 PM Central Time. Last day to make corrections or updates to an already-submitted 2025-26 FAFSA.
Practical reality: Your state grant funds are likely gone by March or April. Treat your state priority date as the real deadline, not June 30.
Now the headline states for 2025-26, starting with the ones most readers ask about.
FAFSA deadline 2025 Florida filers face a layered calendar. Bright Futures Scholarship requires graduating high-school seniors to submit a Florida Financial Aid Application by April 15, 2026, but the Bright Futures award uses high-school GPA and SAT or ACT scores to set the level rather than the FAFSA itself. The Florida Student Assistance Grant (FSAG), which is need-based, uses FAFSA data and follows a May 15, 2026 state-level priority. School deadlines fall earlier than both, usually February or March, so practical Florida advice is to file the FAFSA the week it opens and submit the Florida Financial Aid Application by April 15. There is no waiting list for Bright Futures if you meet the academic thresholds and file on time.
FAFSA deadline in California is the strictest big-state cutoff and the highest-stakes one. The Cal Grant priority deadline for 2025-26 is March 2, 2026, and it is a hard date, not a soft priority. Submit your FAFSA and your verified GPA via the Cal Grant GPA Verification Form by March 2 or you lose Cal Grant for the year, full stop. The Cal Grant program covers up to full systemwide fees at UC, full system tuition at CSU, an access award at California Community Colleges, and a tuition award at participating private institutions. There is also a September 2, 2026 secondary deadline for California Community College applicants only, who can still qualify for a smaller Cal Grant award through community-college reserves.
FAFSA California deadline signage at most high schools points to March 2 for everyone, which is the safe interpretation.
FAFSA deadline 2025 Indiana tracks the state's Frank O'Bannon Grant and 21st Century Scholarship programs through the Indiana Commission for Higher Education. For the 2025-26 award year, the Indiana state aid priority deadline is April 15, 2026, with the Frank O'Bannon Grant covering tuition and fees for Indiana residents at participating in-state institutions. The 21st Century Scholarship requires earlier enrollment (7th or 8th grade) and uses the FAFSA only to confirm continued eligibility. Indiana also runs the Adult Student Grant for working adults pursuing certifications, which uses the same April 15 priority. Filing in December or January is the safe play for Indiana state aid.
Key State Deadlines for 2025-26
Cal Grant priority deadline, hard cutoff. FAFSA plus GPA Verification Form must both be in by March 2. September 2 secondary deadline for community-college applicants.
Florida Financial Aid Application for Bright Futures. FSAG follows a May 15 state priority. Schools set February or March institutional cutoffs.
TEXAS Grant priority deadline. File the FAFSA or TASFA at the same time and contact your school financial aid office to confirm. Many schools set even earlier February institutional dates.
MAP Grant is first-come, first-served. ISAC announces a suspension date each year, often in March or April. File in December for a realistic shot at the maximum award.
Frank O'Bannon Grant and Adult Student Grant priority deadline. 21st Century Scholarship uses the FAFSA but has separate enrollment requirements.
Michigan Tuition Grant, Michigan Competitive Scholarship, and Michigan Achievement Scholarship all use the FAFSA. ORS Mitchell Reconnect Program has rolling deadlines.
FAFSA deadline Michigan centers on three big
state programs and one newer one. The Michigan Tuition Grant (MTG) supports residents at independent in-
state colleges. The Michigan Competitive Scholarship is need-and-merit-based using SAT or ACT. The Michigan Achievement Scholarship, launched in fall 2023, can pay up to $5,500 per year at public universities and $4,000 at independent colleges for in-state residents who graduated from a Michigan high school. All three use FAFSA data and follow a May 1, 2026 priority deadline for the 2025-26 cycle through the Michigan Student Aid agency. Reconnect Program participants (adult residents pursuing degrees or certificates) submit the same FAFSA but follow a rolling deadline through MI Reconnect.
Illinois FAFSA deadline is technically open-ended in 2025-26 in that the Illinois Student Assistance Commission (ISAC) does not publish a state-level hard deadline. In practice, the Monetary Award Program (MAP Grant) operates on a first-come, first-served basis and ISAC announces a 'suspension date' once the year's appropriation is depleted. In recent cycles, that suspension has fallen in March, sometimes earlier. For 2025-26, ISAC has signaled that funds may carry deeper into the spring than usual due to the new state appropriation, but waiting past December is still a roll of the dice. ISAC also administers the Golden Apple Scholars program for future teachers and AIM HIGH for top in-state students, each with its own application timeline.
When is FAFSA due for 2025 26 Texas applicants? The TEXAS Grant program has a January 15, 2026 priority deadline for the 2025-26 cycle, with funds awarded to financially eligible Texas residents who enrolled in a Texas public college within 16 months of high-school graduation. The Texas Equal Opportunity Grant supports community-college students with the same priority date. Texas residents who cannot file the FAFSA (typically undocumented Texas high-school graduates who qualify for in-state tuition under Senate Bill 1528) file the Texas Application for State Financial Aid (TASFA) on the same January 15 schedule. Some Texas campuses set an even earlier December 1 institutional deadline for their own grants, so check with each school you applied to.
More State 2025-26 Deadlines
FAFSA Tennessee: Tennessee Student Assistance Award (TSAA), HOPE Scholarship (Tennessee version), and Tennessee Promise all tie to FAFSA data. TSAA is need-based with a February 1, 2026 priority for the 2025-26 cycle. Tennessee Promise (two-year community college) has a November 1 application deadline of senior year for tuition-free enrollment, which is well before the FAFSA closes. HOPE Scholarship deadlines align with the FAFSA submission cycle but require Tennessee residency for at least one year before high-school graduation.
Georgia FAFSA deadline: HOPE Scholarship and Zell Miller Scholarship use the FAFSA for eligibility verification and are administered by the Georgia Student Finance Commission. There is no hard state priority date for 2025-26, but practical advice is to file by April 1, 2026 to ensure HOPE is in place for the fall semester. The Georgia Tuition Equalization Grant for residents attending eligible Georgia private colleges has a separate priority of May 1.
Virginia FAFSA deadline: Virginia uses the State Council of Higher Education (SCHEV) to administer Tuition Assistance Grant (TAG) for residents at private in-state colleges (priority July 31, 2026, but funds usually run out by spring) and the Commonwealth Award and Virginia Guaranteed Assistance Program (VGAP) for public-school students, both administered through school financial aid offices using FAFSA data. School deadlines effectively pull the Virginia priority forward.
Colorado FAFSA deadline: Colorado does not publish a single state-level priority for 2025-26, but the Colorado Department of Higher Education funds the Colorado Student Grant (need-based) through individual college financial aid offices. Each institution sets its own priority, usually February or March. The Colorado Opportunity Fund (COF) stipend, a per-credit-hour tuition reduction for in-state residents at public colleges, requires a one-time COF application separate from the FAFSA. Aim to file the FAFSA by February for full Colorado aid.
FAFSA deadline Las Vegas: Las Vegas residents are Nevada residents for state aid purposes. The Nevada Promise Scholarship covers two years of community-college tuition for in-state high-school graduates who complete service hours and submit the Nevada Promise application by October 31, 2025 of senior year for fall 2026 enrollment. The Millennium Scholarship for residents at NSHE schools uses GPA and test-score thresholds rather than FAFSA need data. UNLV and CSN both set February or March institutional FAFSA deadlines for their own grants and work-study.
Illinois again, with specifics: ISAC sends MAP suspension notifications when the year's allocation depletes. The 2024-25 cycle suspended in mid-April. Plan for early December filing if you live in Illinois and want any realistic shot at MAP. The MAP grant pays between approximately $300 and $5,800 depending on need and school type and is renewable if you re-file the FAFSA each year.
Federal date: June 30, 2026 for 2025-26 submission, September 10, 2026 for corrections. Generous but useless for most state aid purposes.
State priority dates: February through May for most states. Hard cutoffs in California (March 2), Texas (January 15), Tennessee (February 1, TSAA). Soft suspension dates in Illinois (variable), Florida (April 15 Bright Futures), Indiana (April 15).
School dates: Set by each campus. Typically January, February, or March. Apply to four or more colleges, you have four or more deadlines, and the earliest wins for institutional aid. Check the financial aid section of each college website you applied to.
Two-step process: file FAFSA, list all colleges, then watch each campus respond with an institutional financial aid letter between January and April. The state response comes through the school's financial aid office, not directly to you in most cases.
A few patterns repeat across all of these states that are worth knowing. First, the
FAFSA is the data backbone, but state agencies are decision-makers in their own right. Filing the
FAFSA does not automatically enroll you in state grant programs in every state. In a dozen states (California, New York, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Louisiana, New Jersey, Arkansas, Idaho, Texas for non-citizens, Illinois for MAP renewal forms, and a few others) there is an additional step on top of the FAFSA. Skipping that step costs the grant. Always confirm with your state agency whether you need to do anything beyond the federal form.
Second, the rule with funding pools is universal: if it is finite and your state says 'priority' or 'first-come,' file it as early as possible, not the day before the deadline. The reason January and February dates work is that most filers wait until April, and by then the funding is gone. Filing in October or November (or December for the delayed 2025-26 cycle) means you are processed before the pool even starts to drain. The early filer captures the full grant in almost every state every year.
Third, the federal deadline is not the right target. The June 30, 2026 federal deadline for 2025-26 sounds like room to spare, but you have already lost state and school aid by then. The only people who realistically file in June are students who just realized they qualified for aid, or who moved late in the year, or who fixed an eligibility issue at the last minute. Even those filers usually only get federal aid for the spring or summer term that follows submission. The state programs are closed.
Take the FAFSA Deadlines Practice TestHere is a month-by-month plan for the 2025-26 cycle that handles every state at once. In
October and November 2024, set up your StudentAid.gov account if you do not already have one. Confirm your Social Security Number, name spelling, and date of birth match what the Social Security Administration has on file. If you are a dependent student, your contributor parent or parents do the same. Locate your prior-year tax return (2023 income data is used for the
2025-26 FAFSA) so you can authorize the IRS direct data exchange when prompted.
In
December 2024, the FAFSA opened. File it as soon as possible in December or early January. If you live in Texas, file by January 15 for the TEXAS Grant priority. If you live in Tennessee, file by February 1 for TSAA. If you live in California, file by March 2 with the GPA Verification Form. If you live anywhere else, earlier is better. Use the IRS data exchange screen, list every college you might attend (up to 20), and submit.
In
January and February 2025, your FAFSA gets processed and the federal Office of Federal Student Aid sends the data to every school and state agency you listed. Watch your StudentAid.gov dashboard for the
FAFSA Submission Summary (formerly the SAR) and confirm your Student Aid Index. Complete any state-specific extras: Cal Grant GPA Verification, NY TAP application at hesc.ny.gov, PHEAA State Grant for Pennsylvania, TSAA for Tennessee. Schools start sending out financial aid award letters.
In
March and April 2025, this is decision month for most applicants. You compare award letters, accept or decline aid, and confirm your school of choice. State priority deadlines for most programs (California Cal Grant March 2, Florida Bright Futures April 15, Indiana April 15, Michigan May 1, Illinois MAP often suspended) all fall in this window. If you have not filed by now and you live in a competitive state like Illinois, your state grant is gone.
In
May and June 2025, finalize enrollment, accept any federal loans, sign the Master Promissory Note at studentaid.gov, and complete entrance counseling. Confirm your state grant amount and how it will be disbursed. The federal correction deadline for 2024-25 is September 10, 2025, in case you need to fix anything for that prior cycle.
2025-26 State Deadline Checklist
Identify your state of legal residence (where the dependent student's parents file taxes, or where the independent student lives). Find your state higher-education agency website (California Student Aid Commission, Florida Office of Student Financial Assistance, ISAC for Illinois, and so on). Look up your state's 2025-26 priority deadline. Bookmark it. File the FAFSA at studentaid.gov as early as possible (December 1, 2024 onward for 2025-26). List every college you might attend, including in-state and any portable-aid out-of-state options. Complete state-specific add-on forms (Cal Grant GPA Verification, NY TAP, PHEAA, TSAA, TASFA, NJ HESAA, Idaho Opportunity). Watch the StudentAid.gov dashboard for your FAFSA Submission Summary and confirm SAI. Confirm with each college's financial aid office that they have received your FAFSA data. Review state and school award letters when they arrive (usually January through April). Re-file the FAFSA every year. State grants almost never renew automatically. What if you missed the priority deadline already? You have three workable moves. The first is to file the FAFSA today anyway. Federal Pell Grant and Direct Loans remain available for the entire 2025-26 cycle through June 30, 2026 (with September 10, 2026 for corrections). You may also still qualify for institutional grants at some colleges, especially smaller private schools that have their own funding pools and award rolling throughout the year. The lost piece is the state grant, but two out of three sources of aid is still meaningful money.
The second move is to contact your state higher-education agency directly and ask about late funding. Every state agency has a phone number on its website. Some states reopen briefly when an appropriation comes through mid-year or when funds are reallocated from non-renewing recipients. California, Florida, and New York have all had mid-cycle reallocations in past years. The agency staff can also tell you whether a particular campus has remaining institutional grant funding that uses your FAFSA.
The third move is to plan aggressively for next cycle. The 2026-27
FAFSA is expected to return to the traditional October 1, 2025 opening (the 2025-26 December 1 delay was a one-time event tied to the simplified form rollout). Filing on October 1, 2025 the day the 2026-27 cycle opens puts you in the first wave of state grant applicants and is the single biggest move you can make for state aid the following year. Set a calendar reminder now.
One more thing for dependent students: the FAFSA contributor system means your parent or parents must each create their own StudentAid.gov account and confirm their identity using a one-time invitation from your application. If a parent contributor does not complete their portion, your FAFSA never finishes processing, no state grant flows, and you miss the deadline regardless of when you opened the form. Get all contributors into the system in December, not the night before the priority deadline. The
FAFSA application walk-through covers this contributor step in detail.
Filing in December vs Filing in March 2025-26
A note specifically on the 2024-25 versus 2025-26 distinction, because these get confused. The 2024-25 FAFSA cycle covered enrollment from summer 2024 through summer 2025. It closed federally on June 30, 2025 with corrections through September 10, 2025. Both of those dates are now past, and if you are still trying to file for the 2024-25 cycle, you cannot. The
2025-26 FAFSA, which covers summer 2025 through summer 2026 enrollment, opened December 1, 2024 and closes June 30, 2026 federally. State and school deadlines for 2025-26 are the operative ones for any award going to a student attending college during the 2025-26 academic year.
For the upcoming 2026-27 cycle, expect a return to October 1, 2025 as the opening date. The U.S. Department of Education has signaled that 2026-27 will use the now-stable simplified FAFSA and should not face the rollout delays that pushed 2024-25 and 2025-26 into late winter.
State deadlines for 2026-27 will mostly follow their traditional pattern, with California Cal Grant on March 2, 2027, Texas TEXAS Grant on January 15, 2027, and so on. Mark October 1, 2025 on the calendar for the 2026-27 opening if you are planning ahead.
For graduate students, the state-aid picture is generally bleaker. Most state grant programs are restricted to undergraduates only. A handful of states (notably some in the Mountain West and New England) extend small need-based grants to graduate residents in high-demand fields like nursing, teaching, or social work. Otherwise, graduate aid is mostly federal Direct Unsubsidized and Grad PLUS loans, plus institutional fellowships and assistantships. The FAFSA still matters for grad students because it unlocks federal aid, but state deadlines may not apply to your situation. Check your state agency for any graduate programs before assuming you are out of luck.
The
main FAFSA deadline overview page covers each year's federal cycle dates in chronological order if you need to look up a different award year. For a year-by-year breakdown of all FAFSA cycles, see the
FAFSA deadlines by year reference.
Try the FAFSA Federal Student Aid Eligibility TestPulling it all together, the FAFSA is a federal form with fifty-one separate state deadlines layered on top. The federal date (June 30, 2026 for 2025-26) is the last day, not the right day. The state priority dates (March 2 California, January 15 Texas, February 1 Tennessee, April 15 Florida and Indiana, May 1 Michigan, variable Illinois and Colorado) are the dates that actually decide who gets state grants. The school dates (set individually by each campus, usually January through March) decide who gets institutional grants and work-study. File by the earliest of the three and you have hit all three.
If you are reading this after your state's priority date has already passed for 2025-26, file the FAFSA anyway today. Federal aid is still on the table through June 30, 2026. Then plan to file October 1, 2025 the morning the 2026-27 cycle opens. The October filer captures the maximum state grant every year. The March or April filer often gets nothing from the state, regardless of how much need they have.
Last point: state grant rules change. New programs launch every year (Michigan Achievement Scholarship in 2023, Arizona Promise expansion in 2024). Deadlines shift when state budgets are passed late. Eligibility tiers move when appropriations change. The dates published here are accurate for 2025-26 as of this writing, but always confirm by checking your state higher-education agency directly. Bookmark the agency website, sign up for email alerts if available, and check back each November as the next cycle opens. A bookmark plus a calendar reminder is the simplest possible system for never missing state aid again.
FAFSA Questions and Answers
What is the FAFSA deadline 2025 Florida?
Florida's 2025-26 cycle has layered deadlines. The Florida Financial Aid Application for Bright Futures Scholarship is April 15, 2026. The Florida Student Assistance Grant (FSAG) follows a May 15, 2026 state priority deadline. Individual Florida colleges set their own institutional deadlines, usually February or March. The earliest of the three applies, so file the FAFSA by February if you want full Florida aid coverage.
When is the FAFSA deadline in California for 2025-26?
California Cal Grant has a hard March 2, 2026 priority deadline for the 2025-26 cycle. You must submit both the FAFSA and the Cal Grant GPA Verification Form by that date to qualify for first-time Cal Grant awards. Community-college applicants also have a secondary September 2, 2026 deadline. Filing one document without the other forfeits Cal Grant for the year.
When is FAFSA due for 2025-26 Texas?
Texas residents file the FAFSA (or TASFA for non-citizens who qualify for in-state tuition) by January 15, 2026 to be considered for TEXAS Grant priority funding. Many Texas colleges set even earlier December 1 institutional deadlines for campus grants and work-study. The federal FAFSA deadline of June 30, 2026 applies but only to federal aid, not the TEXAS Grant.
What is the Illinois FAFSA deadline for 2025-26?
Illinois does not publish a single state-level cutoff. The Monetary Award Program (MAP Grant) operates on a first-come, first-served funding pool, and the Illinois Student Assistance Commission (ISAC) issues a suspension notice each year when funds are depleted. In recent cycles, MAP has suspended in March or April. File the FAFSA in December for any realistic chance at MAP Grant.
What is the FAFSA deadline Michigan for 2025-26?
Michigan uses a May 1, 2026 priority deadline for state aid programs including the Michigan Tuition Grant, Michigan Competitive Scholarship, and Michigan Achievement Scholarship. All three programs use FAFSA data to determine eligibility for Michigan high-school graduates attending in-state colleges. Reconnect Program applicants follow rolling deadlines through MI Reconnect.
Does FAFSA Tennessee require a separate state application?
Yes, Tennessee uses the Tennessee Student Assistance Application (TSAA) at tnstudentaid.com on top of the FAFSA. TSAA priority is February 1, 2026 for the 2025-26 cycle. The HOPE Scholarship and Tennessee Promise also use the FAFSA for need or eligibility checks. Tennessee Promise specifically requires senior-year application by November 1 of the year before college enrollment.
What are the Georgia, Virginia, and Colorado FAFSA deadlines?
Georgia has no hard state cutoff for 2025-26, but file by April 1, 2026 to ensure HOPE Scholarship and Zell Miller award eligibility is in place. Virginia Tuition Assistance Grant priority is July 31, 2026, but funds typically run out by spring, so February is the practical target. Colorado does not set a single state deadline; individual colleges set their own priority dates, usually February or March.
What if I miss my state's FAFSA priority deadline for 2025-26?
File the FAFSA at studentaid.gov anyway. Federal Pell Grant and Direct Loans remain available through June 30, 2026 for the 2025-26 cycle. Your state grant may be reduced or zero, but federal and institutional aid are still possible. Contact your state higher-education agency directly to ask about late funding or mid-year reallocations. Then plan to file October 1, 2025 the day the 2026-27 cycle opens for full state-aid eligibility the following year.