The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Some FAFSA news: There’s ‘grandparen­t loophole’

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This is a miserable year to be applying for financial aid.

Millions of families probably won’t get a final price tag for college until at least April because of a series of Education Department delays in rolling out the new Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) form. Students with parents who do not have a Social Security number still can’t complete the online form.

But if you’re applying for aid and have grandparen­ts who want to help, you may be in luck.

Under the old rules, the FAFSA asked about “untaxed income” and “money received, or paid on your behalf.” That was your cue to disclose assistance from a grandparen­t.

That help was a kind of benefit, and the aid formula included it when figuring out what you could afford to pay. Once most schools get FAFSA data from the federal government, they determine how much of their own aid to give you, if any, on top of any Pell Grant or subsidized loans from the federal government. But now, thanks to a 2020 law that went into effect this year, those questions about money and income are gone. That means that at most schools, help from a grandparen­t no longer will count against you.

In other words, what experts once referred to as the “grandparen­t trap” now is the “grandparen­t loophole.” It’s not clear how many families will benefit, though a gain of several thousand dollars per year is possible.

At first glance, the change seems unfair. If you have family money, somebody ought to know about it so you don’t get grants or scholarshi­ps that you don’t need. But public policy frequently is complicate­d. The 2020 law was part of an effort to simplify FAFSA. The more questions asked, the thinking went, the less likely people were to finish it, or even begin. For low-income families, in particular, that could keep students from starting college. And those who did answer might enter incorrect figures if they didn’t quite grasp what the inquiries were getting at. Unusual entries on the FAFSA can set off audits that delay aid.

The new FAFSA, by contrast, uses data directly transferre­d from the IRS.

Bryce McKibben, who worked on the FAFSA simplifica­tion legislatio­n as a Senate staff member and now does education policy and advocacy work at Temple University, notes that with most major federal benefits for individual­s, there are opportunit­ies for family members and others to give money to program recipients without disclosing it.

Moreover, a few hundred schools use a second form, known as the CSS Profile, that may ask about grandparen­t and other contributi­ons, then take that into account when doling out assistance. The College Board, which offers the form to schools, maintains a list of participat­ing institutio­ns on its website. Keep in mind that schools could stop (or start) requiring the form at any point.

People who enjoy bending the rules of financial systems probably are salivating. What if parents save money, then transfer it to the grandparen­ts? Aid formulas assess parental assets when determinin­g eligibilit­y, so this could shield a big chunk of money.

“Nobody has ever come back to me and said that they did this,” said Billie Jo Weis, vice president of client services at My College Planning Team, which does education consulting. “They would have to give up the legal rights to the money.”

Nearly any public policy change will have losers, winners and people who manage to turn themselves from losers into winners. But the bet here is that people in this last category won’t get a lot of new help because of the change. Meanwhile, low-income families who used to get no money under the old FAFSA system would gain a lot more.

How this could affect you

If you’re an older family member, you have no idea what sort of teenager a toddler will turn out to be. So what is the best way to help?

One good strategy is to open a 529 college savings plan. It grows free of taxes over time, and you don’t pay any when the money is used for school, as long as it goes toward eligible educationa­l expenses. Plus, in over 30 states, you get a state tax break when you make deposits.

It doesn’t take much. If you can manage $50 a month and the money grows at 5% each year, you’ll end up with around $17,000 after 18 years.

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