TL;DR

The Key Terms

Before you open the application, you need to understand what the numbers actually mean.

Student Aid Index (SAI)
A number the FAFSA calculates from your financial information. It's not what you owe, it's an index schools use to determine how much aid to offer you. A lower SAI generally means more aid eligibility.
Cost of Attendance (COA)
The full estimated cost of attending a school for one year, including tuition, housing, books, and living expenses. This is the sticker price before aid.
Financial Need
The gap between what school costs and what the government thinks you can pay: Cost of Attendance minus your SAI. Schools use this number to build your aid package.
Pell Grant
Federal money you don't have to pay back. Reserved for students with high financial need. The maximum amount changes annually, check StudentAid.gov for current limits.

Dependent vs. Independent Status

This is the most common source of confusion. For FAFSA purposes, "independent" has a specific legal definition, it doesn't just mean you pay your own bills. If you're under 24, you're almost always considered dependent, which means the government expects your parents to contribute and requires their financial information.

You may qualify as independent if you meet at least one of these:

Why independent status matters

Independent students often qualify for significantly more aid because only their own income counts against their SAI. If you genuinely meet one of the criteria above, make sure you answer the dependency questions accurately on the form.

How to File: Step by Step

01

Create your FSA ID

Both you and one parent (if you're dependent) need an FSA ID at StudentAid.gov. This is your legal digital signature. Create it a few days before you plan to file, it takes time to verify against Social Security records.

02

Gather your documents

You'll need your Social Security number, federal tax returns from two years prior (for the 2026–27 school year, that's 2024 taxes), and records of any untaxed income. If you're dependent, you need the same documents for your parents.

03

List your schools

You can list up to 20 schools. Add every school you're considering, even ones you haven't applied to yet. Schools receive your data automatically and can begin building your aid package.

04

Use the IRS Data Exchange

The FAFSA has a tool that pulls your tax information directly from the IRS. Use it. It saves time, eliminates transcription errors, and reduces the chance your application gets flagged for verification.

Reading Your Award Letter

Once a school accepts you, they'll send a financial aid award letter listing what they're offering. Not everything on the list is equal.

What Most People Don't Know

Disclaimer: Financial aid rules, deadlines, and award amounts change frequently. Always verify current details at StudentAid.gov and directly with your school's financial aid office.