Open the new FAFSA, get halfway through, and notice something strange. It barely asks for income. No long table of wages. No spot to type your AGI. No "enter taxes paid" box. That's not a glitch. That's the 2024 redesign doing its job.
Under the old form, families typed every number off the 1040 by hand. Mistakes were brutal. Type your wages where it wants AGI? Your aid offer drops by thousands. The FAFSA Simplification Act killed that workflow. The form now talks straight to the IRS, pulls the numbers itself, and only asks you the questions a computer can't answer.
So why does the form still ask some income questions, skip others, and treat parents differently than students? Short answer: the things FAFSA still asks are the things the IRS doesn't track. Untaxed income. Child support received. Combat pay. Money that never shows up on a W-2 but still affects your fafsa sai calculation.
This guide walks through every income question on the 2025โ26 and 2026โ27 forms โ what it asks, why it asks, and what to do when something feels off. You'll see why the form pulls 2023 taxes for 2025โ26 (it's called Prior-Prior Year). Why your parents may not get an income question at all if they qualify for the simplified path. And why "FAFSA didn't ask for my income" is actually the form working correctly.
Fair warning: a few sections get into IRS-speak. Stick with it. The payoff is a faster form, fewer errors, and an aid offer that reflects your real situation. Also worth knowing โ if your fafsa income situation changed dramatically since 2023 (job loss, divorce, big medical bills), there's a separate appeals path called Professional Judgment. The form won't ask. You have to ask your school.
The 2024 FAFSA redesign replaced manual income entry with direct IRS data exchange (FA-DDX). The form pulls your AGI, taxes paid, and income tax from the 2023 tax return automatically. You only answer questions for income the IRS doesn't track โ like untaxed income, child support received, and certain veteran benefits. That's by design, not a bug.
Before 2024, the FAFSA had something called the IRS Data Retrieval Tool โ the DRT. You'd click a button, log into IRS.gov inside the form, and pull your tax data over. Most people skipped it. They typed numbers by hand. Numbers got wrong. Aid offers got weird.
The FAFSA Simplification Act of 2020 killed the DRT and built something better: FA-DDX, the Future Act Direct Data Exchange. It's not a button. It's mandatory. When you sign your section of the form and your parent signs theirs, the Department of Education requests the matching tax data straight from the IRS. The form never shows you the numbers. They flow straight into your Student Aid Index calculation.
That's why the form feels short. The questions you used to spend 20 minutes typing are now invisible. You consent. The data moves. Done.
You don't see your AGI on the FAFSA. You don't type your tax. You don't get a chance to "round" or "estimate" โ the IRS number is the FAFSA number. If your tax return had an error, the error rides into your aid calculation. If the IRS later amends your return, the FAFSA doesn't auto-update. You have to tell your school.
Roughly 1 in 5 FAFSA filers didn't have to file a return. Maybe income was too low. Maybe a parent is on disability. The form handles this with a separate path: you check the "non-filer" box, and the form asks a short list of income questions instead of pulling IRS data. Wages from W-2s. Disability payments. That's it. The fafsa income and asset reporting rules for non-filers are simpler โ but the income still counts.
Here's a question that confuses every first-time filer: "Why does FAFSA ask for 2023 taxes?" You're filling out the form in late 2024 for the 2025โ26 school year. Why old taxes?
It's called the Prior-Prior Year rule (PPY). FAFSA uses the tax return that's two years before the school year starts. For 2025โ26, that's 2023. For 2026โ27, it's 2024.
The reason is brutally practical. Before PPY, FAFSA opened in January and asked for the tax year you'd just finished. Most families hadn't filed yet. They'd estimate, file the FAFSA, file taxes, then go back and amend the FAFSA. Aid offers slipped into summer. Students missed school deadlines.
PPY fixes the timing. By the time the FAFSA opens in October, your 2023 taxes have been filed for months. The IRS has clean data. The form pulls it without estimates. You get a real aid offer before you've even applied to college.
This is the catch. A 2023 number can be wildly wrong for 2025. Lost a job in 2024? Got divorced? Had a baby? The form doesn't ask. PPY uses old data on purpose โ to keep the form clean.
The fix is called Professional Judgment. You contact your school's financial aid office, explain the change, document it (termination letter, divorce decree, medical bills), and they can recalculate your aid using current numbers. It's not automatic. Schools are not required to do it. But every school has the legal authority, and most use it more often than people realize. If your fafsa income limit situation looks borderline because of 2023 numbers, ask. The worst they can say is no.
What you answer: Your own untaxed income (rare for most students), any child support you receive, and basic identity info. You consent for the IRS to send your 2023 tax data โ if you filed.
What your parent answers: The same untaxed income questions, plus household size and number in college. Parent consents for IRS data on the parent return.
Total income questions: Usually under 10 for a dependent student + 1 contributor parent. Old form had 40+.
If you qualify as independent (24+, married, veteran, have dependents, in foster care, unaccompanied homeless youth), your parents don't fill out FAFSA at all. The form skips every parent income question. You answer your own untaxed income items, consent to IRS data, and you're done.
Spouse income is required if you're married. Same flow โ they consent, IRS sends data.
See the fafsa independent student rules for the full criteria.
Didn't file a tax return? Check the non-filer box. The form asks for W-2 wages (if any), other earned income, and untaxed sources like SSI, TANF, child support. Document everything. Schools may ask for proof.
Note: "non-filer" doesn't mean "no income." It means income was below the IRS filing threshold or you were claimed on someone else's return.
FAFSA now uses the parent who provided more financial support in the past 12 months โ not the custodial parent. Only that parent's income counts. The other parent's income is invisible to the form.
If that parent remarried, the new spouse's income counts too. The fafsa for divorced parents guide breaks down every scenario.
The IRS only tracks taxable income. But financial aid is supposed to reflect your real ability to pay. So FAFSA asks about money that flows in but never hits a 1040. This list is short, specific, and often misunderstood.
What's not on this list matters too. The form no longer asks about cash gifts from family. Doesn't ask about money paid on your behalf by someone else. Doesn't ask about scholarships and grants. That's a 2024 simplification win.
Most scholarships aren't taxable, so they don't show up on your 1040 and don't hit FAFSA. But if any part of a scholarship paid for room, board, or non-required expenses, that part is taxable. It lands on your tax return as "SCH" income. When FAFSA pulls your IRS data, it pulls that too. The form then asks you to identify what portion was scholarship/grant income โ because that piece gets excluded from the financial aid calculation. It's the rare case where the form asks for a number to subtract, not add.
Form 1098-E reports student loan interest you paid in 2023. It's an above-the-line deduction โ meaning it reduces your AGI before FAFSA pulls the number. So if you paid student loan interest, your reported FAFSA income is already lower than your gross wages.
The form doesn't ask about 1098-E directly. It doesn't need to. The IRS already applied it when calculating your AGI. But if you skipped claiming the deduction on your return, you missed out twice โ on the tax savings and on a lower FAFSA income number.
One of the strangest things about the new FAFSA: some dependent students see zero parent income questions. The form justโฆ skips them. Three reasons this happens.
If parent AGI is under $60,000 and parents meet certain conditions (filed a 1040A/EZ in the old system, received means-tested benefits, etc.), the form runs a Simplified Needs Test. It pulls AGI from the IRS, ignores assets entirely, and skips most income detail questions. Faster form, more aid.
If parent AGI is under $35,000 (and other criteria met), the student gets an automatic SAI of -1500 or lower. The form essentially stops asking. Maximum Pell Grant flows through. The sai fafsa system was designed to make this path automatic for the lowest-income families.
If anyone in the household received SNAP, TANF, free/reduced lunch, SSI, Medicaid, or WIC in the past 24 months, the form fast-tracks. Less income detail. Faster path to aid.
If you're surprised the form didn't ask for your parents' income, check whether one of these applied. It's almost always a feature, not a missing question. The FAFSA isn't broken. It just decided your family didn't need the long version. Check your fafsa submission summary to see exactly which path the form took.
Income asks about money flowing in over a year. Assets ask about what you own on the day you file. The FAFSA asks both. Don't confuse them.
Checking and savings balances on filing day. Investment accounts โ stocks, bonds, mutual funds, brokerage accounts, certificates of deposit. Real estate other than your primary home. Business assets if you own 100% and have more than 100 employees (most family businesses are exempt). Money in 529 plans counts โ but at a low rate, and only the account owner's plans get counted.
Primary home equity. Retirement accounts of any kind โ 401(k), IRA, Roth, pension. Life insurance cash value. Annuities. Small family-owned businesses with under 100 employees. Cars, jewelry, collectibles, furniture. The form doesn't ask, and you shouldn't volunteer.
The Simplified Needs Test (under $60K AGI) skips asset questions entirely. The auto-zero SAI path (under $35K) skips them. For most middle-income families with modest savings, assets contribute very little to the SAI calculation anyway โ about 5.64% of parent assets above an allowance, and around 20% of student assets. A $10,000 savings account moves the needle by about $560 for parents, $2,000 for students. Worth noting before you panic-spend.
If your 2023 return has errors, fix it before you file FAFSA. The IRS data pull happens at submission. Any amendment after that point doesn't reach FAFSA without manual intervention from your school.
Amend the return, wait 6โ8 weeks for IRS to process, then file FAFSA. Or file FAFSA first with the current data and request a correction via your school after the amended return processes. Either path works โ the first is cleaner.
You can't "adjust" income because you want more aid. You can't move money out of savings the day before you file to lower assets. You can't transfer assets to a relative to hide them. The Department of Education runs verification on roughly 30% of FAFSAs and the IRS data pull makes most income manipulation impossible. Stick to legitimate fixes. The system catches the rest. If you're worried about your fafsa income limits status, run the official estimator first โ it uses the same rules.
You file your 2023 tax return โ typically by April 2024. This is the data FAFSA will use for the 2025โ26 school year.
2025โ26 FAFSA opens. Form is short โ most questions are absent because IRS data fills in the gaps.
You and any contributor (parent, spouse) sign with FSA ID. Each consent triggers a separate IRS data request.
Department of Education receives AGI, taxes paid, filing status, and other return items. You never see the raw numbers.
Your Student Aid Index is computed using IRS data + your untaxed income answers. Lower SAI = more aid.
Your FAFSA + SAI flows to every school on your list. They build aid packages from grants, work-study, and loans.
Letters typically arrive between February and April. You can request Professional Judgment if 2023 doesn't reflect now.
Cash payments without a W-2 still count as income. If you reported them on your return (as self-employment or other income), they're in your AGI and they hit FAFSA. If you didn't report them, they're invisible โ but you have a separate IRS problem. Don't try to fix the FAFSA issue by lying. Fix the tax issue first.
Inheritance isn't income. It doesn't show up on a 1040. FAFSA doesn't ask about it as income. But once it lands in a savings account, it's an asset on filing day โ and it counts. If you inherit in October and file FAFSA in November, the cash counts. If you've spent it down on tuition by then, it doesn't.
Capital gains are income. They land on Schedule D and roll into your AGI. A one-time stock sale can spike your 2023 AGI and tank your aid for 2025โ26. This is one of the classic Professional Judgment cases โ the gain was a one-time event, not your normal income.
Schedule C net income lands on the 1040 and gets pulled by FAFSA. If your business had a loss in 2023, AGI is lower โ which actually helps aid. If you took a salary from your own corp, it's on the W-2. Either way, the IRS data is the FAFSA data. You can't game it. But you can plan ahead โ owner draws vs salary, retirement contributions, equipment deductions โ all of these legitimately lower AGI.
Citizens, eligible non-citizens (green card, certain visas), and citizens of the Marshall Islands, Micronesia, or Palau can file FAFSA. Undocumented students cannot file federal FAFSA but may have state options. If you're an eligible non-citizen with foreign income, you'll need to convert to USD and answer manually โ the IRS pull doesn't work for foreign returns.
This was a major 2024 fix. Parents without SSNs can now create FSA IDs using an alternative identity verification process. They can consent to data sharing even though there's no IRS return to pull โ the form then asks income questions manually for the contributor parent.
You got to the end of the form. It feels too short. Did you skip a section? Almost certainly not. The 2024 form is shorter on purpose.
Quick checks:
If everything looks right and the form still skipped income questions, that's the redesign at work. Submit. Review the Submission Summary. Contact your school's aid office if anything looks off in your offer letter.