Every university sets its own
FAFSA priority deadline, and those dates almost never line up with the federal one. The federal cutoff for the
FAFSA is June 30 the year after the award cycle ends, which sounds generous until you realize that by then UCLA, Penn, Virginia Tech, and dozens of other schools have already finished packaging institutional aid for the upcoming fall. Miss the school deadline and you may still qualify for federal Pell and federal loans, but the grant money each university gives out of its own endowment, the work-study slots, and any need-based scholarships are often gone. That is real money, sometimes tens of thousands of dollars a year, that walks away because of a missed date.
This guide pulls together the priority deadlines for the universities students ask about most: UCLA, UC Davis, UC Riverside, University of Houston, University of New Hampshire, CU Boulder, University of Wisconsin, the University of Pennsylvania, the University of Tennessee Knoxville, Virginia Tech, Howard, Indiana Bloomington, Tulane, and Texas State, along with a wider list of comparable schools. Each entry covers the priority date, any school-specific extras (CSS Profile, GPA verification, departmental scholarship applications), and what happens if you file late.
Read your school's date the same way an athletic recruit reads a signing deadline. You do not aim to land on it. You aim to beat it by a couple of weeks. The single biggest predictor of aid package size, after family income, is filing date relative to the school deadline. October filers consistently get larger packages than March filers at the exact same income level, because by March the school has already spent down its institutional grant pool. The
FAFSA deadlines at the federal level are a backstop, not a target.
University FAFSA Deadlines at a Glance
March 2
UCLA, UC Davis, UCR priority FAFSA deadline (Cal Grant)
Nov 1
UPenn early action CSS + FAFSA deadline
Jan 15
Virginia Tech FAFSA priority deadline
Feb 15
Howard, Tulane priority FAFSA filing date
Before walking through individual schools, it helps to understand why university deadlines exist at all when the
federal FAFSA has its own. Each college has a finite pool of institutional aid: need-based grants funded by endowment income, scholarships funded by donors, and work-study positions allocated by the federal program but distributed by the campus financial aid office. The school must match these dollars to admitted students before the academic year starts. To do that, the aid office needs the FAFSA data well before the first day of class, which is why priority deadlines fall in November, January, February, or March depending on the school.
The mechanics are simple. You file the FAFSA at studentaid.gov. Within about a week, your data is transmitted to every school you listed on the form (up to 20 schools now). The school's financial aid office downloads your record, calculates your demonstrated need based on its own cost of attendance, and decides how much institutional aid to award alongside federal aid. If your FAFSA arrives after the school's priority date, you go into a secondary processing queue and receive whatever institutional aid is left after the on-time pool is exhausted. Sometimes there is plenty left. More often there is little or none, especially at universities with high demand and modest endowments.
The other layer is the CSS Profile, run by College Board, which Penn, Tulane, Howard, Virginia Tech (for some programs), and roughly 200 other selective schools require in addition to the FAFSA. CSS Profile asks more detailed financial questions than the FAFSA, including home equity, business assets, and non-custodial parent income for dependent students. The Profile deadline at most schools is the same as the
FAFSA priority deadline, sometimes a week earlier. Schools that require both forms expect both to land by the date. Submit only the FAFSA and you may be considered for federal aid but excluded from the bigger pot of institutional grants.
Federal deadline: June 30 the year after the award year. Late but guarantees federal Pell, Direct Loans, and federal work-study if eligible.
State priority deadline: varies by state, ranges January through April for most states. Cal Grant requires March 2 for California schools.
University priority deadline: set by each school. November 1 for early action at Penn. January 15 at Virginia Tech. February 15 at Howard and Tulane. March 1 at CU Boulder, UNH, UTK, and several Big Ten schools. March 2 across the UC system.
Rule of thumb: file the FAFSA the week it opens (October 1 in normal years), and you have beaten every university priority deadline at once.
Start with the California schools because they share a hard deadline. The
UCLA FAFSA deadline,
UC Davis FAFSA deadline,
UC Riverside FAFSA deadline, and the dates for every other UC and Cal State campus are all March 2. That date is not a soft target. It is the Cal Grant priority deadline, which means missing it does not just affect institutional aid from the school. It eliminates one of the largest state grants in the country, worth up to full tuition at a UC, for first-time applicants. The same date applies to the GPA Verification Form, which high schools or current colleges submit electronically on the applicant's behalf. Skip the GPA form and Cal Grant goes away even if your FAFSA arrived on time.
UCLA also packages a meaningful share of institutional grant aid (Regents Scholarships, Achievement Awards, Bruin Scholarships) using FAFSA data, and applies the same March 2 cutoff for full consideration. UC Davis layers in its Aggie Grant program (need-based) and the Davis Scholar designation (merit) on top of Cal Grant. UCR follows the standard UC formula but tends to have slightly more institutional grant capacity per capita, which makes early filing especially valuable. Across all UC campuses, the recommendation is the same: file the FAFSA in October, file the GPA form by January, and never look at March 2 as your goal.
FAFSA deadline discipline at California schools is where most students leave money on the table.
Outside California, the
Virginia Tech FAFSA deadline is January 15, one of the earliest in the country. Virginia Tech uses this date to award the University Honors Scholarship, Presidential Campus Enrichment Grant, and need-based aid from its own endowment. The school also accepts the CSS Profile for some specific scholarship competitions but does not require it for general financial aid. Filing in October or November is the only way to safely beat the January 15 date, because the IRS data exchange and any verification flags can take three to four weeks to resolve.
The
UTK FAFSA deadline (University of Tennessee Knoxville) is March 1, which lines up with the Tennessee state deadline for HOPE and TSAA. UTK also administers a portfolio of named scholarships through the Office of Financial Aid and Scholarships, and uses the FAFSA priority date as the gateway for full consideration. Tennessee residents who file by March 1 are eligible for both state-level HOPE and university institutional aid. Out-of-state UTK students still need the FAFSA but should focus on UTK-specific merit programs administered separately.
Top University FAFSA Priority Deadlines
March 2 priority deadline (Cal Grant). All UC and Cal State campuses share this date plus the GPA Verification Form requirement.
Early Decision: November 1 for FAFSA + CSS Profile. Regular Decision: December 31 (FAFSA) / February 15 (CSS). Penn meets full demonstrated need.
January 15 priority deadline. Funds institutional grants and Presidential awards from its own pool. CSS not required for general aid.
February 15 priority deadline. Howard requires the CSS Profile in addition to the FAFSA for full institutional aid consideration.
February 15 priority for need-based aid plus CSS Profile. Tulane has the Distinguished Scholars program with separate merit applications.
April 15 priority deadline. IU Bloomington layers institutional aid (21st Century Scholars match for Indiana residents) on top of federal and state aid.
East Coast and Midwest schools have their own date rhythms. The
UPenn FAFSA deadline is the most aggressive of the elite private universities. For Early Decision applicants, the FAFSA and CSS Profile are both due November 1. For Regular Decision, the FAFSA must be submitted by December 31 and the CSS Profile by February 15. Penn meets 100% of demonstrated financial need without loans for families under certain income thresholds (the Penn First Plus program is the headline example), which makes the priority window non-negotiable. Late applicants do not get the same package. Penn also accepts non-custodial parent CSS Profile information when families are separated, which adds steps that take time to compile.
The
UNH FAFSA deadline at the University of New Hampshire is March 1. UNH packages need-based aid (UNH Granite State Scholarship for residents) and merit aid (Hamel Scholars, Presidential Scholars) using FAFSA data submitted by that date. Out-of-state students applying to UNH should still target March 1 even though their state deadline might be later, because the school decides on institutional aid based on the university date, not the state one. New Hampshire residents have additional opportunities through the New Hampshire Higher Education Assistance Foundation, which uses the FAFSA but is administered separately.
The
CU Boulder FAFSA deadline for the University of Colorado Boulder is March 1. CU Boulder draws on Colorado Student Grant (state), Pell (federal), and its own institutional aid (Esteemed Scholars, Stampede Scholars, Distinguished Scholarship) to build packages, and uses the FAFSA priority date as the gating step for all three. The
University of Colorado Boulder FAFSA deadline and the broader
University of Colorado FAFSA deadline for the Denver and Colorado Springs campuses share this date for full institutional aid consideration. Colorado residents also qualify for the Colorado Opportunity Fund stipend, which requires a one-time COF application at the campus level.
The
University of Wisconsin FAFSA deadline for UW-Madison is March 1 as a priority date, with the school continuing to process applications afterward on a funds-available basis. UW packages the Bucky's Tuition Promise for Wisconsin residents from families earning under the threshold, the Wisconsin Grant for need-based aid, and institutional scholarships from the FAFSA pool. Filing by January or February is the practical recommendation, because the Bucky's Tuition Promise has its own residency verification steps that take a few weeks.
Detailed University Deadlines and Aid Programs
UCLA FAFSA deadline: March 2 priority date. Cal Grant is the headline state award, worth up to full UC tuition for eligible California residents. Regents Scholarship, Achievement Award, and Bruin Scholarships are merit-based and use the FAFSA as the financial-need snapshot. Out-of-state UCLA students still file the FAFSA for federal aid and limited institutional grants.
UC Davis FAFSA deadline: March 2. Aggie Grant (need-based institutional aid), Davis Scholars (merit), and Regents Scholarships all key off this date. The GPA Verification Form is mandatory for first-time Cal Grant applicants and must arrive by the same March 2 cutoff.
UCR FAFSA deadline: March 2. UC Riverside has a slightly larger institutional aid budget per capita than other UC campuses, which means early filing has even stronger payoff. Highlander Grant and Chancellor's Scholarship draw from the same FAFSA pool.
U of H FAFSA deadline: University of Houston priority deadline is April 1. UH layers TEXAS Grant (state, January 15 priority statewide), Tier One Scholarship (merit), and institutional need-based aid. Texas residents at UH should file by January 15 to lock in both the state grant and the university aid window.
UPenn FAFSA deadline: Early Decision November 1 for both FAFSA and CSS Profile. Regular Decision December 31 for FAFSA, February 15 for CSS Profile. Penn First Plus eliminates loans for families earning under the income threshold, but only for applicants who meet the priority window. Non-custodial parent CSS Profile is required for separated families.
Howard University FAFSA deadline: February 15 priority. Howard requires the CSS Profile in addition to the FAFSA for institutional aid consideration. The Capstone Scholarship and Trustee Scholarship are merit awards that key off the same February 15 date. Howard students should also explore HBCU-specific federal grant supplements and external scholarship competitions.
Tulane University FAFSA deadline: February 15 priority. Tulane requires the CSS Profile and meets a high share of demonstrated need. The Distinguished Scholars program (Paul Tulane Award, Dean's Honor Scholarship, Stamps Scholarship) is merit-based and uses separate applications with their own December and January deadlines, layered on top of the FAFSA need analysis.
Virginia Tech FAFSA deadline: January 15 priority. Virginia Tech uses FAFSA data to award the University Honors Scholarship, Presidential Campus Enrichment Grant, and need-based institutional aid. Virginia residents also qualify for the Virginia Tuition Assistance Grant (separate state form). The Hokie Scholar program at the College of Engineering has its own merit application by mid-November.
UTK FAFSA deadline: March 1 priority. The University of Tennessee Knoxville aligns with the Tennessee state HOPE Scholarship and TSAA deadline. Volunteer Statesman Awards and the Haslam Scholars Program are merit additions for residents and high-performing applicants. Out-of-state UTK applicants should focus on the Tennessee Pledge and Promise programs separately.
UNH FAFSA deadline: March 1 priority. UNH packages the Granite State Scholarship for New Hampshire residents and the Presidential and Hamel merit awards from FAFSA-tied need data. Out-of-state students should target the same March 1 date to access the University Scholars Program.
CU Boulder FAFSA deadline: March 1 priority. The University of Colorado Boulder layers Colorado Student Grant (state), Pell (federal), Esteemed Scholars (merit), and Distinguished Scholarship aid from the FAFSA pool. The Colorado Opportunity Fund (COF) requires a one-time campus-level application.
University of Colorado FAFSA deadline: March 1 across CU Denver, CU Colorado Springs, and CU Boulder for full institutional aid consideration. Each campus has its own merit scholarship competitions with earlier deadlines, especially for honors college admission.
University of Wisconsin FAFSA deadline: March 1 priority at UW-Madison. Bucky's Tuition Promise covers full in-state tuition for Wisconsin families earning under the threshold. Wisconsin Grant is the need-based state award. Distinguished Scholarship and Chancellor's Scholarship layer additional merit aid.
Indiana University Bloomington FAFSA deadline: April 15 priority. IU Bloomington matches 21st Century Scholars (state program for Indiana residents) and layers Hudson and Holland Scholars Program for underrepresented students. Selective scholarship programs (Wells Scholars, Cox Research Scholarship) have separate November and December deadlines.
What about
Howard University FAFSA deadline mechanics specifically? Howard sets February 15 as priority because the institutional aid budget is finite and the school competes with other selective institutions for the same admitted students. Howard is one of the historically Black colleges and universities (HBCU) and runs a distinct portfolio of internal scholarships (Trustee, Capstone, founders) on top of federal Pell and Direct Loans. The CSS Profile is also required, and the Profile asks for non-custodial parent data when applicable. Skip the Profile and Howard cannot package institutional aid even if your
FAFSA is pristine. The recommendation here is to file the FAFSA in October or November, complete the CSS Profile by the first week of January, and keep an eye on Howard-specific scholarship deadlines that fall in mid-January and early February.
Tulane university FAFSA deadline mirrors Howard's at February 15, with the same CSS Profile requirement. Tulane meets a high share of demonstrated need and runs the Distinguished Scholars merit competition with separate December and January deadlines. The Paul Tulane Award, Dean's Honor Scholarship, and Stamps Scholarship are the headline merit programs, and applicants for those compete on an earlier timeline than the general aid pool. Need-based aid keys off February 15. The layered approach (merit application first, FAFSA and CSS by mid-February) is common at selective private universities and worth understanding as a pattern.
The
Indiana University Bloomington FAFSA deadline is later, April 15, which reflects the larger institutional aid pool and the integration with Indiana state programs. The 21st Century Scholars program for Indiana residents pays in-state tuition at IUB if students enroll in the program in middle school and meet GPA and behavioral requirements. The Indiana Frank O'Bannon Grant is need-based for residents. IU Bloomington layers Hudson and Holland Scholars Program for underrepresented students. Wells Scholars and Cox Research Scholarship are the headline merit programs with November and December deadlines, separate from FAFSA.
The
TXST FAFSA deadline at Texas State University is April 1, which aligns with the broader Texas pattern. TEXAS Grant is the state need-based program (January 15 priority statewide). TXST also runs its own Bobcat Promise for Texas residents from families earning under the threshold and the Foundation Scholarship program for merit aid. Texas residents at Texas State
should file the FAFSA in October to capture both state and institutional aid windows, even though the formal university date is April 1.
Take the FAFSA Practice TestLet us walk through the monthly cadence that works for every university on this list, no matter the formal date. In
August, before senior year of high school or the start of a new academic year, pull last year's federal tax return out of storage. Confirm your Social Security Number on file with the school. Create or refresh your FSA ID at studentaid.gov. Parents in dependent-student families do the same. If you and your family file a non-custodial CSS Profile, set up the College Board account for that parent too. The setup hour you spend in August prevents panic in October.
In
October, the day the FAFSA opens (October 1 in normal years, sometimes later when the form is rewritten), file it. List every university you might attend, up to 20 schools now. The IRS data exchange runs automatically once you grant consent. Most applicants finish the FAFSA in 30 to 45 minutes. Even if your final school list is not yet decided, list the most likely candidates. Adding schools later is free. Submit the CSS Profile the same week through the College Board portal for any school that requires it.
In
November, log back in to studentaid.gov to confirm the FAFSA was processed. Check your Student Aid Index and make sure it looks right. Verify the IRS data pulled in correctly. If a school flagged your
FAFSA for verification, the dashboard will say so. Respond immediately. Verification can take three to four weeks, and you do not want it dragging through a January 15 deadline at Virginia Tech.
In
December and January, watch for award letters from your schools. Top-tier privates (Penn, Tulane, Howard) typically release letters in February or March. UCs and many publics release in March or April. Compare offers. The institutional aid number on each letter should match what the financial aid office has on file from your FAFSA data. If anything looks wrong, call the aid office immediately.
By
March, all priority deadlines except IU Bloomington's April 15 have passed. If you missed one, file the FAFSA anyway. Federal Pell and Direct Loans remain available. The school may still award institutional aid from the secondary pool. But realize the package will likely be smaller than it would have been with on-time filing. Use this experience to commit to October filing the following year.
Step-by-Step University FAFSA Checklist
Pull your high-school or college list and note each school's FAFSA priority deadline (call the financial aid office if unclear). Check whether each school requires the CSS Profile in addition to the FAFSA. Set up your FSA ID at studentaid.gov in August before the FAFSA opens. File the FAFSA the week it opens (October 1 in normal years) โ earliest reliable strategy. Submit the CSS Profile through College Board the same week for any school that requires it. Submit the GPA Verification Form by March 2 for any California school (UCLA, UC Davis, UCR, others). Check your FAFSA dashboard in November for verification flags and respond immediately. Apply for school-specific merit scholarships separately (Wells, Stamps, Hokie Scholar) on their own timelines. Compare award letters in March and April; call the aid office if institutional aid looks lower than expected. Re-file the FAFSA every year; most institutional aid is non-renewable without a fresh FAFSA. What about families with non-custodial parents, divorced parents, or unique circumstances? This is one of the most common sources of confusion at universities that require the CSS Profile. The FAFSA itself only asks about the custodial parent (the parent the student lived with more during the past 12 months). The CSS Profile, by contrast, asks about both parents in most cases unless one is deceased, unknown, or there is documented estrangement or abuse. Penn, Tulane, Howard, and most other CSS schools will request non-custodial parent financial data through a separate online form. If you have not been in contact with a non-custodial parent for years, you can file a Non-Custodial Parent Waiver Petition explaining the situation, supported by a letter from a counselor or social worker. Most schools grant the waiver but expect documentation.
Another common scenario: parents who recently separated or divorced. The FAFSA asks about your custodial parent's prior-year tax return, which may have been filed jointly with your other parent. If that is the case, you report your custodial parent's share of the joint income. The CSS Profile asks for the same information in more detail and may request copies of both parents' returns separately. Schools understand that divorce paperwork can take time to resolve and generally allow document substitutions or professional judgment if the situation is complicated. The
FAFSA for parents documentation walks through these scenarios.
For independent students (married, age 24 or older, military veteran, ward of the court, etc.), the FAFSA only asks about your own and your spouse's finances. Most CSS Profile schools follow the same independence rules but verify them more rigorously. If you fit one of the independence criteria, attach the supporting documentation when you file the Profile so the aid office does not have to chase you for it.
One last edge case: students from mixed-status families (one US citizen parent, one non-citizen, or vice versa). The
FAFSA is open to US citizens and eligible non-citizens. Parents who are not citizens still need to provide their financial information using their own Tax ID Number (TIN) or a non-citizen parent worksheet. The Texas Application for State Financial Aid (TASFA) is the parallel application for Texas students who are not eligible to file the FAFSA. New Jersey, Washington, and a handful of other states have similar alternative applications.
Filing Early vs Filing Late for University Aid
A few additional schools deserve mention even though they are not in the headline list. Many state flagships follow a March 1 or April 1 priority pattern: Ohio State,
Penn State, Michigan State, University of Michigan, University of Florida (May 15 priority for FSAG but October-November practical cutoff for institutional aid), University of Maryland (February 15), Rutgers (April 15 for HESAA, earlier for institutional), and University of Washington (January 15 priority). Ivy League and Ivy-Plus schools largely follow Penn's pattern: Early Decision FAFSA and CSS by November 1, Regular Decision by January or February. Stanford, MIT, and the rest of the Stanford-MIT-Ivy cluster also meet 100% of demonstrated need without loans for low-income applicants.
FAFSA deadlines by school lists the full picture by institution.
For students applying to multiple universities, the practical answer is to file by the earliest priority date on your school list. If you are applying to both Virginia Tech (January 15) and Indiana Bloomington (April 15), file by January 15 to cover both. There is no penalty for filing earlier than a school needs; the data simply sits in the queue and gets processed when the aid office runs its packaging cycle. There is significant penalty for filing late at any one school on your list. The IRS data exchange does the heavy lifting once you grant consent, so you can
complete the FAFSA in 30 minutes if your tax return is on hand.
If you are a transfer student, the university you are transferring to handles FAFSA differently. Most schools accept transfers on a rolling FAFSA cycle, but you should still file by the standard priority date for your destination school. Some institutional grants are reserved for entering freshmen and not available to transfers. Check with your new school's financial aid office. If you are a graduate student, FAFSA still matters for federal Direct Stafford and Grad PLUS loans, but most institutional grant aid at the graduate level comes through teaching or research assistantships, not the FAFSA pool.
If you are an international student or DACA recipient, the FAFSA may not be open to you, but TASFA in Texas, the NJ Alternative Application in New Jersey, and the Washington Application for State Financial Aid (WASFA) in Washington provide parallel state pathways. Many private universities (Penn, Tulane, Howard) award their own institutional aid to international and DACA students using the CSS Profile alone. Check with each school's financial aid office for the specific path.
Try the FAFSA Financial Aid Eligibility Practice TestPulling it all together: every university has its own
FAFSA priority deadline, and those dates almost always sit well before the federal cutoff. The UCs share March 2 with the Cal Grant. Penn's Early Decision deadline is November 1 for both FAFSA and CSS. Virginia Tech's hard date is January 15. Howard and Tulane use February 15 with a CSS Profile requirement. CU Boulder, UNH, UTK, and the University of Wisconsin cluster around March 1. Indiana Bloomington and Texas State allow April. The University of Houston follows the April 1 Texas pattern. None of these dates is the federal deadline. All of them must be met to get the best institutional aid package each school offers.
The practical strategy is the same everywhere. File the FAFSA the first week of October, the day it opens. List every school on your application list. Submit the CSS Profile alongside it for schools that require it. Submit the GPA Verification Form to any California school in your list. Track your FAFSA dashboard in November for verification flags. Wait for award letters in February through April. Compare carefully. Call the aid office if anything looks wrong. Re-file every year.
If you are reading this with a university priority deadline already past for the current cycle, file the FAFSA today regardless. Federal Pell and Direct Loans remain available throughout the cycle. Your school may still award institutional aid from a secondary pool. Use the experience to commit to October filing next year. The single biggest predictor of aid package size, after family income, is filing date relative to the school deadline. That is within your control. Talk to your high-school counselor or the financial aid office at your target university. They have seen every edge case, know which programs the school participates in, and can flag the school-specific extras you would otherwise miss.
FAFSA Questions and Answers
Is the university FAFSA deadline the same as the federal one?
No. The federal FAFSA deadline is June 30 the year after the award year ends, but every university sets its own priority deadline that falls well before the federal one. UCs share March 2. Penn ED is November 1. Virginia Tech is January 15. Howard and Tulane are February 15. File by your school's priority date, not the federal one.
What is the UCLA FAFSA deadline?
March 2 priority. The UCLA FAFSA deadline aligns with the Cal Grant priority deadline and applies across all UC campuses (UCLA, UC Davis, UC Riverside, UC Berkeley, others) plus Cal State campuses. First-time Cal Grant applicants must also submit the GPA Verification Form by March 2 or lose Cal Grant eligibility entirely.
When is the UPenn FAFSA deadline?
November 1 for Early Decision applicants (FAFSA and CSS Profile both due). December 31 for Regular Decision FAFSA, with the CSS Profile due February 15. Penn First Plus eliminates loans for families under the income threshold but requires on-time filing.
What is the Virginia Tech FAFSA deadline?
January 15 priority deadline, one of the earliest in the country. Virginia Tech awards University Honors Scholarship, Presidential Campus Enrichment Grant, and need-based institutional aid based on this date. The CSS Profile is required only for specific scholarship competitions, not for general financial aid.
What is the U of H (University of Houston) FAFSA deadline?
April 1 priority deadline at the University of Houston. UH layers TEXAS Grant (Texas state, January 15 priority), Tier One Scholarship, and institutional need-based aid. Texas residents should file the FAFSA by January 15 to lock in both state and university aid windows.
What is the Howard University FAFSA deadline?
February 15 priority deadline. Howard also requires the CSS Profile by the same date for institutional aid consideration. Trustee Scholarship and Capstone Scholarship are merit awards layered on top of FAFSA need analysis. Howard is one of the historically Black colleges and universities (HBCU) with a distinct internal scholarship portfolio.
What is the Tulane University FAFSA deadline?
February 15 priority deadline with a required CSS Profile. Tulane meets a high share of demonstrated need. Distinguished Scholars merit competition (Paul Tulane Award, Dean's Honor Scholarship, Stamps Scholarship) runs on separate December and January deadlines layered on top of the FAFSA need analysis.
What is the Indiana University Bloomington FAFSA deadline?
April 15 priority deadline. IU Bloomington matches 21st Century Scholars (state program for Indiana residents) and runs Hudson and Holland Scholars Program. Wells Scholars and Cox Research Scholarship are headline merit programs on separate November and December timelines.