www.FAFSA.gov: Studentaid.gov Replaced the Old Federal Aid Portal

www.FAFSA.gov now redirects to StudentAid.gov. Learn the history, how to access old records, FSA ID portability, and fix broken bookmarks.

www.FAFSA.gov: Studentaid.gov Replaced the Old Federal Aid Portal
If you typed www.FAFSA.gov into your browser this morning and ended up staring at a page that says StudentAid.gov across the top, you are not lost and your computer is not broken. The U.S. Department of Education quietly consolidated the old standalone FAFSA website into its larger federal student aid portal a few years back, and the old domain now does a 301 redirect to the new home. The change confuses parents who saved bookmarks in 2014, counselors who printed handouts in 2017, and students who borrowed last year and assumed the address would stay put forever. It will not. The sooner you update your mental map, the smoother your aid year goes.

Here is the short version, and then we will dig into the details. The Federal Student Aid (FSA) office runs everything related to federal college money, from the FAFSA itself to loan servicing to the National Student Loan Data System. For roughly two decades each of those tools lived on its own domain. fafsa.ed.gov handled the application. studentloans.gov did Master Promissory Notes and entrance counseling. nslds.ed.gov tracked your debt history. pin.ed.gov, and later fsaid.ed.gov, issued the credential you used to sign anything. The result was a maze, and every year hundreds of thousands of borrowers got lost in it. FSA decided to merge the maze into a single house. That house is studentaid.gov, and the front door for the application piece is now studentaid.gov/h/apply-for-aid/fafsa.

Did the actual FAFSA change? Some of it, yes, because the FAFSA Simplification Act forced a separate rewrite of the questions in 2024 (Expected Family Contribution became Student Aid Index, the form shrank from 108 questions to roughly 36, the IRS data exchange got tighter). But the URL change is older and unrelated. You can finish the same form, sign with the same FSA ID, and submit to the same processor whether you start at the old www.FAFSA.gov address or the new one. The redirect is silent and automatic.

www.FAFSA.gov by the Numbers

2019Year FSA began consolidating sites onto studentaid.gov
301HTTP redirect type from www.FAFSA.gov to studentaid.gov
17.6MFAFSAs filed in the most recent cycle
$120B+Annual federal aid disbursed through the portal
The consolidation started in the 2018 to 2019 award year and rolled out in waves. The FSA team picked studentaid.gov as the consolidated home because it already hosted the informational content (how aid works, repayment plans, default rescue, public service loan forgiveness) and traffic data showed users were bouncing between the marketing site and the transactional sites constantly. Putting everything under one roof cut that ping-pong and let the engineering team retire several aging back-end systems. The FSA ID login, which had moved off the old four-digit PIN in 2015, became the single sign-on token for the merged portal. One login, one dashboard, one URL to remember.

If you used the old www.FAFSA.gov before 2019, you may recall the strange green and gold color scheme, the slightly clunky welcome screen that asked whether you were a student, a parent, or a preparer, and the persistent reminder to install Java to view certain pages. None of that exists anymore. The new design is mobile-first, accepts every modern browser without plugins, and walks you through a guided application that branches based on your dependency status and the schools you list. The save-and-finish-later feature, which used to lose data if your session timed out, now syncs to the cloud every few minutes.

The 301 redirect is the key piece. A 301 tells search engines and bookmarks that the move is permanent, which means Google rewrote its index to point at studentaid.gov and any old hyperlink you click eventually lands you in the right place. There is no plan to ever return www.FAFSA.gov to active service. The domain stays registered to FSA only so that the redirect keeps working and so that nobody can buy it and run a phishing scam from the address you trust.
Fafsa Login - FAFSA - Free Application for Federal Student Aid certification study resource

Old www.FAFSA.gov -> studentaid.gov/h/apply-for-aid/fafsa

Old fafsa.ed.gov -> studentaid.gov/h/apply-for-aid/fafsa

Old studentloans.gov -> studentaid.gov/mpn and studentaid.gov/entrance-counseling

Old nslds.ed.gov -> studentaid.gov/aid-summary

Old fsaid.ed.gov -> studentaid.gov/fsa-id/sign-in

One FSA ID still works for every link above. If your username and password unlocked the old portal, they unlock the new one.

Why did FSA pick this particular moment to merge everything? Three reasons stacked up. First, the underlying infrastructure was aging. fafsa.ed.gov ran on a custom Java stack that few contractors still knew how to maintain. Migration to a modern cloud-hosted platform was already in the budget, and rebuilding from scratch was cheaper than patching. Second, identity theft and federal aid fraud were spiking, and a single sign-on point gave the security team one perimeter to defend instead of five. Third, Congress kept passing laws (the FAFSA Simplification Act, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, the Bipartisan Student Loan Certainty Act) that demanded coordinated data sharing between forms, schools, and the IRS. Coordinating five separate codebases was painful. One codebase made the legal compliance work tractable.

The IRS Data Retrieval Tool is a good example. On old www.FAFSA.gov, the DRT was a popup window that opened a session on the IRS site, asked you to log in there, copied specific lines from your last tax return, and slid them back into the FAFSA. The data crossed two domains, two security boundaries, and required users to keep popups enabled. Many applicants gave up partway and typed numbers manually, which then failed verification and triggered weeks of paperwork. On studentaid.gov the DRT was retired and replaced by a direct IRS-to-FSA data exchange that pulls income figures behind the scenes after you consent on one screen. You never leave the page. The exchange covers far more lines than the old DRT did, which is part of why the new FAFSA shrank from 108 questions to roughly 36 (the rest are filled in automatically from your tax return).

What Each Old Path Does on the New Site

editStart a FAFSA

Old www.FAFSA.gov home button is now studentaid.gov/h/apply-for-aid/fafsa. Click 'Start Here' and the guided form opens immediately for the current award year.

refreshRenew a FAFSA

Returning students hit 'Continue an Application' on the dashboard. Last year's answers prefill where the rules still apply, saving roughly 15 minutes.

userSign as Parent

Parents create their own FSA ID at studentaid.gov/fsa-id/create-account and sign their portion electronically. No more shared family passwords.

chartCheck Status

Status, Student Aid Report, and Student Aid Index are all visible at studentaid.gov/h/manage-loans or under the 'My Aid' dashboard tile.

wrenchMake Corrections

The 'Make Corrections' button replaces the old paper SAR. Edits sync to your listed schools within 24 to 72 hours of submission.

schoolAdd or Remove Schools

You can list up to 20 schools at once now (the old form capped at 10). School codes still come from the same federal school directory.

For users who never updated their bookmarks, the experience is mostly invisible. Your browser hits www.FAFSA.gov, the server returns a 301, and the URL bar rewrites itself to studentaid.gov. That is the happy path. Trouble starts when something in your environment blocks the redirect. Old corporate proxies that cached responses years ago sometimes serve the original HTML with broken links. School library terminals running ancient browsers sometimes refuse to follow the redirect because the SSL certificate chain is newer than the trust store. And printed handouts from 2016 still show screenshots of a website that no longer exists.

The fix is the same in every case: type studentaid.gov directly into the address bar. Drop the www, drop the FAFSA, just the seven characters and a dot. The site detects whether you have an active FAFSA in progress, an unsigned form, a renewal you started but abandoned, or a clean slate, and routes you to the right next step automatically. If you prefer the long form, bookmark studentaid.gov/h/apply-for-aid/fafsa instead, which jumps you straight to the FAFSA entry point without going through the dashboard.

Some users also worry that their old records vanished in the migration. They did not. Everything you submitted to the old www.FAFSA.gov system, going back to your very first FAFSA, was imported into the new database. Past Student Aid Reports, prior-year corrections, signed Master Promissory Notes, completed counseling, even the old PIN history (which got upgraded to your current FSA ID in 2015) are all visible under 'My Activity' on the studentaid.gov dashboard. The display format is different (the old green-and-gold tables became modern cards), but no data was lost. If you cannot find an old record, it is almost always because you signed up with a different email address that year and the system thinks you are two separate people. Contact the FSA Information Center at 1-800-433-3243 and they can merge the accounts.
Fafsa Deadline 2025 - FAFSA - Free Application for Federal Student Aid certification study resource

Navigating the Old vs New URLs

The old www.FAFSA.gov home page (a green welcome card with three big buttons) is now studentaid.gov/h/apply-for-aid/fafsa. Same purpose, cleaner layout, mobile-friendly throughout. You can start, save, and submit the FAFSA all from this single URL. The guided flow branches based on your dependency status, the schools you list, and whether you have any unusual circumstances such as homelessness or being an emancipated minor. Save-and-resume now works across devices because answers sync to the cloud after every screen.

FSA ID portability is the question we get most often from returning applicants. The short answer is that yes, your existing credential works everywhere. The longer answer is that FSA quietly hardened the FSA ID security model during the consolidation. If you set up your FSA ID before 2017, you may find that you need to add a phone number or backup email the first time you log in to studentaid.gov, because the system now requires a recovery method that the old PIN system never asked for. You will also be required to enroll in two-step verification (SMS code or authenticator app) before you can sign a FAFSA. This is not optional, even if you skipped it on the old portal.

One subtle change worth knowing: usernames are now case-sensitive when they were not before, and passwords expire every 18 months for accounts that have not signed in recently. If your login fails despite typing the right credentials, try the 'Forgot My Username' or 'Forgot My Password' flow before assuming the account was lost. The recovery emails arrive within minutes and ask for your Social Security Number and date of birth to verify identity (so make sure those match what you submitted on past FAFSAs).

Parents have their own wrinkle. Under the old www.FAFSA.gov, families sometimes shared a single PIN among multiple kids, which was technically against the rules but common. The new system enforces one FSA ID per person, and parents must create their own separate account to sign a dependent student's FAFSA. If you skipped this step in the past, your first visit to studentaid.gov will prompt the parent to register, and the signing step will not complete until both accounts exist. Budget 10 to 15 minutes for the parent registration if it is your family's first time.
Now that you know the URL story, here is what you actually do once you are inside the new portal. The studentaid.gov home screen, when you are not signed in, shows three big call-to-action tiles: Apply for Aid, Manage Loans, and Get Help. Signed in, those tiles are replaced by a personalized dashboard that shows your current FAFSA status, your aid summary if you have ever taken a federal loan, action items the system thinks you should address (like missing signatures or expired credentials), and quick links to common tasks. The dashboard is the new equivalent of the old www.FAFSA.gov welcome page, only customized to you instead of generic.

To start a brand-new FAFSA, click the 'Start Here' button on the Apply for Aid tile, then 'Start a New FAFSA Form.' The system asks which award year you want to apply for (the FAFSA opens October 1 for the following school year, sometimes later if a major rewrite is happening, as it did for 2024 to 2025), confirms your identity, and walks you through the questions in seven sections: Student Demographics, School Selection, Dependency Status, Parent Demographics if applicable, Financials, Signatures, and Review. Each section saves automatically, so closing your laptop midway is fine.

If you started a FAFSA at one of the old URLs and are now returning, click 'Continue or Edit My FAFSA' instead. The system finds your in-progress form and drops you back at the exact question where you left off. Your answers all carried over. The only thing you might notice is a brief 'updating your form' loader as the back end transitions you between the legacy and current schemas.
Fafsa Application - FAFSA - Free Application for Federal Student Aid certification study resource

Old www.FAFSA.gov to New StudentAid.gov Checklist

  • Update bookmarks: replace www.FAFSA.gov with studentaid.gov.
  • Find and sign in to your existing FSA ID at studentaid.gov/fsa-id/sign-in.
  • Add a recovery phone number and backup email if prompted.
  • Enroll in two-step verification (required since 2020).
  • Verify that your saved Social Security Number and date of birth match your tax return.
  • Confirm all prior-year FAFSAs appear under My Activity.
  • Update any printed handouts or PDFs you give to students or family.
  • Bookmark studentaid.gov/h/apply-for-aid/fafsa for direct access to the form.
  • If parents share an old PIN, have each parent register a separate FSA ID.
  • Test the IRS-to-FSA data exchange by consenting on one screen during the financials section.
School counselors who handle multiple FAFSAs each fall have an extra concern: many schools printed posters and handouts years ago that show www.FAFSA.gov prominently. Replacing them is worth the effort, because if a device or network blocks the redirect, the student bounces and may give up. FSA publishes free outreach kits at studentaid.gov with updated graphics, social media images, and printable handouts using the current URLs. Counselors should download fresh versions every August.

State agencies that distribute aid alongside the federal FAFSA also went through this URL transition. Most state aid offices updated their links to studentaid.gov by 2022, but a few smaller programs still point at the old domain. The redirect handles them, but the user sees a flicker mid-load. Run state aid links through the W3C link checker once a year.

For preparers (VITA sites, college access programs, school district aid nights), the move changed the preparer flow. The old system let you fill out a FAFSA using a single shared PIN. The new system requires the student's own FSA ID for the signature step. Preparers can still walk a student through every question, but the student must sign on their own account.

Consolidation to StudentAid.gov: Pros and Cons

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Cons
Security is worth a second look here, because phishing scams aimed at federal student aid users keep climbing. Scammers register lookalike domains (fafsa-online.com, federal-fafsa.gov, fafsa-renewal.org, you can imagine the list) and email students with urgent-sounding messages about deadlines, refunds, or required updates. They link to a page that asks for the FSA ID and SSN, harvest the credentials, and then either drain refund checks or sell the data on dark web forums. FSA itself only uses the studentaid.gov domain and the FederalStudentAid.ed.gov subdomain for official email links. If a message links anywhere else, treat it as a scam, regardless of how official the sender appears.

The www.FAFSA.gov redirect is one tool in this fight. Because FSA still owns the old domain and runs a clean 301 from it, scammers cannot squat on the address you trust. If FSA ever let www.FAFSA.gov expire, a bad actor could buy it the next day and run a phishing page from the address that millions of users still remember. The Department of Education has committed to keeping the domain active for as long as anyone might still type it, which in practice means indefinitely.

One more security note: the new portal logs every sign-in and shows you a history under My Activity. If you see a login from a location you do not recognize, change your password immediately and contact the FSA Information Center. The old www.FAFSA.gov did not offer this kind of audit trail, which is part of why the consolidation made everyone safer even at the cost of some short-term confusion.
Where does www.FAFSA.gov go from here? Probably nowhere visible. The Department of Education has no plans to revive the standalone site, retire the redirect, or change the branding back. Every internal FSA project plan we have seen treats studentaid.gov as the permanent destination. If anything changes, it is more likely to be additional features layered onto studentaid.gov (better mobile app integration, easier import of W-2 data, longer save-and-resume sessions, deeper personalization) than any move back to the old URL. So save studentaid.gov in your bookmarks, share it with anyone still typing the old address, and update your printed materials when the next school year starts.

For students filling out a FAFSA right now, the practical takeaway is simple. Open a browser, type studentaid.gov, sign in with your existing FSA ID (or create one if this is your first time), and follow the prompts. The form is shorter than it used to be, the IRS exchange is faster, and the dashboard remembers where you left off. Plan on roughly 30 to 45 minutes for a first-time FAFSA and 10 to 20 minutes for a renewal. Have your Social Security Number, your parents' tax return if you are a dependent, and a list of schools you might attend within reach. Sign, submit, and watch the dashboard for the confirmation that your Student Aid Index is on its way to those schools.

FAFSA Questions and Answers

About the Author

James R. HargroveJD, LLM

Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist

Yale Law School

James 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.