What is a Financial Aid Offer Letter?
Your financial aid offer letter provides you with the financial aid that you can receive at a particular college or school. The offer includes different types and amounts of aid from federal, state, private, and institutional sources. It is important that you read and understand your financial aid offer letter.
What do the different parts of the offer letter mean?
Estimated Cost of Attendance
Your financial aid offer letter includes information about the cost of attendance (COA), which includes the estimated amount you will pay to the school directly, as well as other costs you may incur while enrolled in school. When reviewing your financial aid offer, you will want to ensure that you understand the two types of costs:
- Direct / Billable Costs
Direct costs are paid directly to the college, such as tuition and fees (i.e., technology fees, activity fees, lab fees, course fees, etc). These are costs for which you will be billed by the college each term you attend.
- Indirect / Other Costs
Indirect costs are expenses that may be necessary to attend college, such as transportation (car, gas, bus), textbooks, school supplies (notebooks, pens, paper), technology (computer, phone, Wi-Fi), living expenses (food and housing), and miscellaneous and personal expenses (clothing, laundry, toiletries, health insurance, etc.). Montco does not bill you for these, but they are important to include when you are budgeting for college.
Your actual financial aid award
Your offer letter will include the federal, state, and institutional aid for which you may qualify. The different types of aid include:
- Grants & Scholarships / Awards / Gift Aid
This section will list the grants and scholarships you have been offered. This is free money that you do not have to pay back, and is funded by the federal or state government, a private entity, or the college. The awards are broken down by term and include the total awarded for each term and the full academic year.
You should always accept 100% of your gift aid because it鈥檚 free money!
- Federal Work Study
You might see Federal Work Study on your offer letter. This is money available to compensate you for part-time employment at the College. Learn more about the Federal Work Study program, including how to apply for jobs on campus.
- Loans
A loan is money you or your parent borrow for your education-related expenses. Loans need to be paid back with interest (a percentage 鈥渇ee鈥 for borrowing). The loans on your award letter may be Federal Direct Loans (Subsidized and Unsubsidized), Federal Direct Parent PLUS Loans, and/or Private Student Loans. The amounts offered will be broken down per semester. Since loans need to be repaid, we encourage you to be a responsible borrower and only accept the amount you need for your school-related expenses. Learn more about student loans.
Resources
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