Evaluating Your Financial Aid Offers
When reviewing your financial aid offers,
you should look beyond the headline number and focus on the true
cost and long-term impact.
Here's a structured checklist to guide you.
1. Understand the Total Cost of Attendance (COA)
Check whether the offer includes all major costs:
- Tuition and fees
- Housing and food
- Books and supplies
- Transportation
- Personal expenses
Compare each school's COA, not just the tuition.
2. Separate Gift Aid from Self-Help Aid
- Gift aid = Scholarships and grants (money you don't
repay).
- Self-help aid = Loans and work-study (money you earn or
repay).
Two offers with the same total aid can be very different if one
includes more loans and the other more grants.
3. Review Loan Types and Terms
- Federal Direct Subsidized vs. Unsubsidized Loans (subsidized
save you interest while in school).
- Parent PLUS Loans and private loans, check interest rates,
repayment terms, and limits.
Be cautious about taking on high debt relative to projected
starting salary in your intended career.
4. Look at Net Price
- Net Price = COA - grants/scholarships.
This is the out-of-pocket cost before considering work-study or
loans. Use this to compare schools on an apples-to-apples
basis.
5. Check Renewal Conditions
- Are scholarships renewable each year?
- Is a certain GPA required?
- Do you need to take a minimum number of credits?
- Are certain majors excluded from renewal?
6. Factor in Non-Financial Considerations
- Campus location and transportation costs.
- Internship/co-op opportunities that may offset costs.
- Time to degree (4 years vs. 5+ can greatly affect total
cost).
7. Run Multi-Year Projections
- Aid packages often change after the first year, especially
merit scholarships.
- Estimate costs over the full degree program to avoid
surprises.
8. Ask Questions
Contact the financial aid office if:
- Costs or aid amounts are unclear.
- Your family's financial situation changes (job loss, medical
expenses).
- You want to request a reconsideration or appeal.