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Help Completing the FAFSA
The FAFSA is a lengthy form, and somewhat complicated. Be sure to read
the instructions before completing the form. Most questions about the
FAFSA can be answered just by reading the instructions carefully.
You will need the Title IV Institution Code for each school to which
you are applying in order to complete the FAFSA. You can get this code
from the school, or you can use FinAid's
Title IV School Code Database.
If you have any questions about completing the FAFSA or federal
student assistance programs, call the Federal Student Aid Information
Center at 1-800-4-FED-AID (1-800-433-3243, TDD 1-800-730-8913)
from 9:00 am to 8:00 pm Eastern Standard Time, Monday through Friday.
The US Department of Education publishes a collection of answers to
frequently asked questions about the FAFSA form at
Completing the FAFSA.
The National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators
(NASFAA) cosponsors
College Goal
Sunday.
College Goal Sunday provides free professional help completing the
FAFSA at workshops held at locations throughout the nation.
Make a copy of the completed FAFSA before mailing it. Keep it in a
safe place with copies of all the records you used to complete the
form. Not only will this be useful as a reference for subsequent
years, but it may also be required for a process called
verification. In addition to comparing the information on your FAFSA
with data from the Social Security Administration, Veterans
Administration, and Internal Revenue Service, the US Department of
Education also selects about one-third of all FAFSAs for
verification. If your FAFSA is selected for verification, the school
will ask you for a copy of all the documentation you used to fill out
the FAFSA.
When you mail your FAFSA, get a certificate of mailing from the post
office to prove that you mailed it. (You do not need to send your
FAFSA or PROFILE by certified or express mail.) If your FAFSA gets
lost, the certificate of mailing will help establish the date you
submitted the FAFSA, verifying that you sent it before the deadline.
If you use FAFSA on the Web, be sure to print out the signature page,
sign it, and mail it. In your rush to submit your application, don't
forget to finish the online process. If you don't reach a page that
says your FAFSA has been submitted, no data has been sent to the
federal processor.
If your parent cannot sign the FAFSA because he or she is not
currently in the United States and cannot be contacted through normal
means, his or her current address is not known, or he or she has been
determined by a licensed medical practitioner to be physically or
mentally incapable of providing a signature, your high school
counselor, principal, or a college financial aid administrator may
sign the form in place of your parent. They do not assume any
responsibility or liability in this process. They should write their
title next to their signature and briefly indicate the reason why they
signed for the parent.
If you submitted a paper FAFSA and want to include more than four
colleges, wait until you receive your Student Aid Report (SAR). After
you receive the SAR you can go online to
fafsa.ed.gov
to change the list of schools, since they will have received your
information at the same time as you received the SAR. Or you could
submit the FAFSA online initially, since the online FAFSA allows
applicants to list up to ten colleges.
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