Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Tips on Increasing Financial Aid Eligibility

Even if you are still a few years away from the first college tuition bill, there are a few steps you can take, some seemingly counter-intuitive, to increase the chances of receiving some sort of financial aid.

About two years before your child is expected to attend college consider how you might reposition your assets so they are more favorably viewed on the applications for financial assistance.  Why start so soon?  The amount of aid you’re eligible for in a given year is based on the previous year’s income.  Controlling your assets and the receipt of income will have a significant impact on your aid eligibility.  For example, capital gains count both as an asset and income and could have a devastating impact on your eligibility.  If you are able to defer income at work, consider doing so for the years your child is in college.  Another option is to reduce your reportable assets.  It may not make sense to pay off that car loan or credit card balance when tuition bills are on the horizon, but it may actually be a wise decision.  Why?  By paying off that car or credit card you simultaneously lower your reportable assets, such as stocks and cash holdings, and increase your financial need.  Parents with $20,000 in the bank and a $10,000 credit card debt will appear to have more resources than parents with $10,000 in the bank and no credit card debt.  In the end, the parents have the same amount of money, but to the financial aid people they have less.

Another strategy to increasing your aid eligibility is to pay attention to who owns what assets.  Asset ownership is critical in determining how much financial aid a student receives.  College-aid officials assess up to 35% of a student’s assets versus only 5.6% of a parent’s holdings.  Therefore, make sure your 529 Plans, Coverdell plans, etc. are in the parent’s names.  Prior to 2006, prepaid tuition plans, including the Independent 529 Plan, were considered an available resource to students and therefore had a more negative impact on financial aid eligibility than a 529 Savings Plan.  However, recent laws passed by Congress treat all 529 plans as parental assets.  Now, no more than 5.6% of your 529 college savings will be used to assess need if you apply for financial aid under federal guidelines.

It always pays to save, but just be careful how you do it.

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