How to Find School FAFSA Codes
Find your school's FAFSA code fast. Lookup steps, examples for Notre Dame, SDSU, Syracuse, Texas A&M, UC San Diego, Walden, Johns Hopkins.

Every college, university, vocational program, and community college that participates in federal student aid programs receives a six-character identifier called a Federal School Code, sometimes called a FAFSA code or Title IV school code. The Department of Education uses these codes to route information between the Free Application for Federal Student Aid and the financial aid offices at the institutions you want to attend.
Without the right code on your application, your Student Aid Index never reaches the school, and the aid office cannot package grants, loans, or work-study for you. The Notre Dame FAFSA code, the SDSU FAFSA code, the Syracuse FAFSA code, and thousands of others all follow the same six-character format that pulls schools into your federal aid record.
The system is older than most college applicants realize. Federal School Codes have been used since the Higher Education Act expanded federal aid in the late 1960s, and the codes have outlived dozens of paper FAFSA redesigns, the move to FAFSA on the Web, and the simplified FAFSA rollout.
The code itself rarely changes once assigned, which is convenient for students who apply, transfer, then return for graduate study at the same institution. The University of Houston FAFSA code today is the same UH FAFSA code your older sibling used a decade ago. The Walden FAFSA code an online learner uses for a doctoral program is identical to the one used by the bachelor program student at the same university.
Adding the right code matters because the FAFSA lets you list up to twenty schools per application, and only the institutions on your list receive your data automatically. Miss a school and you have to log back in, add it, and resubmit, which sometimes pushes you past institutional priority deadlines. This guide walks through how the codes are built, how to find them on studentaid.gov, gives examples for fourteen frequently searched campuses, and explains what to do when a school cannot be found in the official lookup tool.
Federal School Code Quick Facts
Federal School Codes are built from a fixed character pattern. Most codes begin with a zero, though some begin with the letter G or B for graduate-only programs and certain branch campuses. The remaining five characters are numeric and assigned sequentially by the Department of Education as institutions enter the federal aid system.
The Texas A&M FAFSA code follows this convention, as does the UC San Diego FAFSA code, the UT Dallas FAFSA code, and the Michigan State FAFSA code. The codes are not random and not chosen by the school. Once assigned, the code sticks with the institution permanently unless a merger or full federal aid recertification triggers a new identifier, which is rare.
A common mistake is to confuse Federal School Codes with other institutional identifiers. The College Board uses its own four-digit codes for sending SAT scores. ACT, Inc. uses different codes for ACT score reports. The Common Application has its own internal IDs.
None of these can be substituted for the FAFSA code, and entering a College Board code in the FAFSA school field returns either no match or worse, the wrong institution. The Syracuse FAFSA code is not the same as the Syracuse College Board code, and confusing the two is one of the most common reasons students delay their financial aid package.
Branch campuses, online programs, and graduate schools sometimes hold separate codes from the main undergraduate campus. The Johns Hopkins University FAFSA code for the homewood undergraduate campus differs from codes used for the school of advanced international studies and other Hopkins divisions. Students applying to a specific program should verify which campus or division the code points to, especially when the institution has graduate, professional, and online divisions that report financial aid separately.

A Federal School Code is the six-character identifier the U.S. Department of Education uses to route your FAFSA information to a specific college, university, or trade school. The code is what tells federal student aid systems where to send your Student Aid Index, what schools should receive your data, and which institutions can include you in their financial aid packaging. Without the correct code, your information stays inside the FAFSA system and never reaches the campus aid office. Each institution participating in Title IV federal student aid programs has exactly one code per qualifying campus or division, assigned by the Department of Education when the school first became eligible for federal aid.
The fastest way to find a school's code is the Federal School Code Search tool on studentaid.gov. The tool lets you search by school name, state, city, or ZIP code, and returns matching institutions along with their six-character codes. You do not need a Federal Student Aid ID to use the search tool, and the results are identical to what appears inside the live FAFSA form.
Most students who already know the name of their target institution can find the code in under a minute. The tool is updated whenever new schools receive aid eligibility or existing schools change names, so the results always reflect the current federal database.
For schools with multiple campuses, the search returns each location separately. Searching for Texas A&M returns the College Station main campus, Texas A&M Galveston, Texas A&M Corpus Christi, Texas A&M International, and other branches as distinct entries with separate codes. The Texas A&M FAFSA code for College Station is the most frequently searched, but a student attending the Corpus Christi branch must use that specific code, not the College Station code. The same logic applies to the University of Houston system, where the UH main campus has its own code separate from UH Downtown, UH Clear Lake, and UH Victoria.
Online and for-profit schools usually have a single code regardless of student location. The Walden FAFSA code applies whether you live in Florida or Alaska, since the institution operates as a single federal aid entity even when serving students nationally. The Strayer University FAFSA code works the same way, with a single primary code routing aid across all enrolled students regardless of physical campus.
Code Patterns by School Type
Large public flagships like SDSU, Syracuse, Texas A&M, UC San Diego, University of Washington, and Michigan State each have a single primary undergraduate Federal School Code, with separate codes for satellite campuses. State systems typically register each branch as a distinct aid recipient.
Private institutions including Notre Dame, Johns Hopkins, Washington University in St. Louis, and Syracuse hold one code per accredited campus. Graduate and professional schools within these universities sometimes have additional codes when they participate in federal aid as distinct schools.
Schools delivering primarily online programs such as Walden University and Strayer University usually operate under one primary Federal School Code that covers all online enrollments. Students living anywhere in the country use the same code on their FAFSA.
Two-year institutions like Valencia College carry their own Federal School Codes that route aid the same way four-year codes do. Multi-campus community college districts sometimes share a single code or assign separate codes per campus depending on how each district is structured for federal reporting.
Knowing example codes helps you confirm you have found the right entry in the lookup tool. The Notre Dame FAFSA code for the main campus in South Bend, Indiana sits among the early Indiana institutional codes assigned decades ago. The SDSU FAFSA code refers to San Diego State University in California and should not be confused with South Dakota State University, which has a different code and a different campus state. Confusing the two SDSUs is one of the most common Federal School Code lookup errors, especially since the search tool returns both when you type just the acronym.
The Syracuse FAFSA code routes aid to Syracuse University in upstate New York. The Texas A&M FAFSA code most students need refers to the College Station flagship. The UC San Diego FAFSA code is specific to the La Jolla campus and is distinct from other University of California campuses.
The UH FAFSA code, also called the University of Houston FAFSA code, points to the main Houston campus. The University of Washington FAFSA code refers to UW Seattle, with separate codes for UW Bothell and UW Tacoma. The UT Dallas FAFSA code identifies The University of Texas at Dallas in Richardson, Texas.
For private and online institutions, the Valencia College FAFSA code applies to the Florida community college system that primarily serves the Orlando metropolitan area. The Walden FAFSA code is for Walden University, a primarily online institution. The Washington University in St. Louis FAFSA code identifies the private research university in Missouri, not to be confused with University of Washington in Seattle.
The Johns Hopkins University FAFSA code applies to the Maryland-based private research university. The Michigan State FAFSA code identifies Michigan State University in East Lansing. The Strayer University FAFSA code covers the for-profit university now operated as part of the Strategic Education network.

Federal School Code Lookup Methods
Open studentaid.gov and use the Federal School Code Search tool, which sits inside the FAFSA section of the site. Enter the school name, the state, and optionally the city to narrow results. Click search and the tool returns a list of matching schools with each institution's six-character Federal School Code displayed beside the name. The tool is free, requires no login, and uses the same database as the live FAFSA form. If a school does not appear, check spelling, try alternative names like initials and full names, or search by ZIP code. Codes update as soon as the Department of Education changes the official record.
After locating each Federal School Code, the next step is adding the codes to the FAFSA itself. The FAFSA includes a dedicated school selection section where students search and select institutions one at a time. The form accepts up to twenty schools per application and stores them in the order added.
Some students worry that the order matters, but the federal government does not share school ranking information between institutions. Each school sees only its own placement on the list and not the others, so you can add schools in any order without worrying that a top-choice institution will see itself ranked behind a backup.
The FAFSA also lets you remove and replace schools after submission. If you forget a school during the initial submission, log back in, navigate to the school selection page, and add the missing institution. The federal processor updates the affected school's record within one to three business days. Schools that were already on the list keep their existing record and do not need to be re-added. Removing a school from your list does not remove the data the institution already received, but it does prevent future updates from being sent to that school.
Verification is the most common reason aid packages stall after FAFSA submission. The Department of Education flags a portion of applications for verification, requiring students to submit tax transcripts and other documents to confirm the income figures on the FAFSA. The Federal School Code on your application controls which institution receives the verification request, so adding the wrong code can send your verification to a school you never plan to attend while leaving your real target school waiting for missing information.
Federal School Codes change very rarely but they do change when institutions merge, close, or undergo major federal recertification. If you used a code in a previous FAFSA year, verify it again on studentaid.gov before reusing it. An outdated code can route your aid information to a school the Department of Education no longer recognizes, delaying your aid package by weeks. Double check the school name, state, and city in the search result to confirm you have the right institution before adding the code to your form.
Adding schools to your FAFSA in the right way avoids common errors. Use the federal school code search inside the FAFSA form itself rather than typing codes from memory or from old documents. The in-form search returns the school's full name, address, and code together, so you can verify the match before adding it.
Typing a code directly works, but a single transposed digit can route your aid record to the wrong institution silently, with no warning from the form. The FAFSA processor does not detect mismatches between the code and the school name you intend, so caution at the input stage saves time later.
For students applying to multiple programs at the same university, list the institution only once. The Federal School Code identifies the campus or division, not the specific academic program. A student applying to both engineering and business at UC San Diego adds the UC San Diego FAFSA code once and the campus aid office determines program eligibility internally. This single-listing rule applies even when the student is uncertain which program they will attend, because federal aid is awarded based on enrollment status and campus rather than specific major.

Steps to Add Codes to Your FAFSA
- ✓Go to studentaid.gov and open the Federal School Code Search tool before starting the FAFSA, then build a list of every school you might attend with the matching six-character codes
- ✓Verify each code by checking the school's full name, city, and state in the search result, confirming you have the right campus when the institution has multiple branches
- ✓Log into the FAFSA form using your StudentAid.gov account or create one if this is your first federal aid application, then navigate to the school selection section
- ✓Use the in-form search to add each school by name or code, selecting the matching result from the dropdown and confirming the campus before moving to the next school
- ✓Review the full list before submission, making sure all schools you might attend are present and that you have not duplicated any entries or added the wrong campus by mistake
- ✓Submit the FAFSA and check the confirmation page, which lists every school that will receive your information along with the date the data is expected to arrive at each institution
- ✓Track aid packages from each school individually through the school's own financial aid portal, since the FAFSA does not distribute aid offers; institutions package and notify students separately
The question of how many schools to list on your FAFSA is more strategic than students often realize. The federal maximum is twenty per application, and a common piece of advice is to use the full slot count to capture every realistic option.
That advice works well for students still finalizing their college list, but it can backfire for students who add long-shot schools they have no realistic plan to attend. Some institutions use FAFSA submission data as a signal of demonstrated interest, and adding a school you will not attend can dilute that signal at the schools where it actually matters.
A balanced approach is to list every school where you have applied or plan to apply for admission, plus one or two safety schools you would attend if no other offer materialized. This typically yields between four and ten codes for most undergraduates and is well below the twenty-school cap. Graduate students often list fewer schools because graduate program selection is narrower than undergraduate applications. Working adults returning for online degrees, such as those targeting the Walden FAFSA code or the Strayer University FAFSA code, often list a single institution since they are committed to a specific program before applying.
Listing Many vs Few Schools on FAFSA
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State aid programs add another layer of complexity to Federal School Code selection. Many states use the FAFSA as the application for state-funded grants and scholarships, but state aid often requires that the schools listed on your FAFSA include at least one in-state institution.
California, New York, Texas, Florida, and other large states tie state aid eligibility to having an in-state school on the federal application. A student applying to private universities like Notre Dame or Johns Hopkins but living in California should also add at least one California institution like SDSU, UC San Diego, or a state community college to preserve Cal Grant eligibility.
Some states also impose ordering rules that surprise students. Tennessee, for example, has historically given first consideration to the first Tennessee institution listed on a student's FAFSA, though most states no longer rank schools this way. Check your state's higher education website for current state-specific rules, especially if you depend on state grant funding to make college affordable. The Federal School Code itself does not change based on state aid rules, but the order and selection of schools on your FAFSA can affect state aid distribution in ways that the federal process does not.
For students who change schools mid-year or transfer between institutions, the Federal School Code on the FAFSA can be updated to reflect the new school. Transfer students should add the new institution's code to the FAFSA before the transfer is finalized so that aid follows the student to the new campus. The previous school's aid stops once enrollment ends, and the new school can package aid only after receiving the FAFSA record with its own Federal School Code attached. Timing the update correctly avoids gaps in disbursement during the transfer.
One often overlooked detail is that Federal School Codes also affect federal loan disbursement timing. Schools cannot disburse federal Direct Loans, Pell Grants, or work-study to students who do not have a matching Federal School Code on file.
If a student switches schools or adds a new school late in the academic year, the new institution may not receive enough lead time to process aid before tuition deadlines. Adding the right code as early as possible, ideally during the initial FAFSA submission, eliminates this risk and lets each school's financial aid office begin packaging aid as soon as admissions decisions are made.
Federal School Codes work alongside other federal aid identifiers in the background of the system. The Department of Education uses OPE-ID numbers, IPEDS unit IDs, and FAFSA Federal School Codes as overlapping but distinct identifiers for institutions. Students never need to interact with OPE-ID or IPEDS numbers, but financial aid administrators use these other identifiers when reporting institutional data to the federal government. From the student perspective, the only number that matters is the six-character Federal School Code that goes onto the FAFSA, and that number is always accessible through the studentaid.gov search tool.
FAFSA Questions and Answers
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.