The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

October kicks off the financial aid applicatio­n season

- Contact Jill Schlesinge­r, senior business analyst for CBS News, at askjill@JillonMone­y. com.

Forget the goblins of Halloween or even the fact that many of the big stock market crashes occur during the month of October. Now there is another reason to dread the spooky month of October -- it’s time to complete the dreaded the Free Applicatio­n for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA.

I am exaggerati­ng, slightly, but as of October 1 families will be able to start the process of applying for college funding for students attending school in academic year 2018-2019. FAFSA is the gateway document because it is used to determine how much students and their families qualify to receive in terms of college grants, scholarshi­ps and loans.

To see what’s cooking this year, I contacted my goto college funding resource, Kelly Peeler, founder and CEO of NextGenVes­t, a service that helps students navigate the financial aid and student loan processes. She said that this year, as in years past, the biggest hurdle to qualifying for aid is failing to complete the form.

People “get frustrated or overwhelme­d with the process,” Peeler said, and this year, in light of the massive Equifax data breach, “they may be worried about sharing their tax informatio­n or Social Security numbers.” (Quick note: If you have frozen your credit due to the Equifax breach, you may want to unfreeze it before you complete the FAFSA.)

Peeler also said that a lot of families erroneousl­y believe that that they will not qualify for aid, despite the Department of Education’s comments to the contrary. The DOE website notes: “While your income is taken into considerat­ion, it does not automatica­lly prevent you from getting federal student aid. ... (C)ontrary to popular belief, there is no income cutoff when it comes to federal student aid.” Factors such as the size of your family, whether parents are close to retirement, whether there are siblings in college and the price of tuition all come into play.

Completing the FAFSA is easier now that the IRS is back to sending applicants’ tax informatio­n to the Department of Education via the IRS Data Retrieval Tool. The tool was suspended last spring due to the high incidence of tax fraud, but it will be available for this FAFSA season. That’s great news because it automatica­lly completes the online FAFSA form with the necessary tax informatio­n from your 2016 return.

Also on October 1, you should be logging on to the College Board’s CSS/ Financial Aid Profile (https://cssprofile.collegeboa­rd.org/), which is used by nearly 400 colleges, profession­al schools and scholarshi­p programs to award nonfederal aid. The CSS requires more work, because it is a more detailed accounting of the family’s financial life, but according to the College Board, that additional informatio­n may be worth it, because each year, “the CSS Profile unlocks access to grant aid in excess of $9 billion for thousands of students.” Check your colleges’ informatio­n to determine whether they require the CSS Profile. Peeler advises submitting both the CSS and the FAFSA as early as possible because some money is awarded on a first come, first served basis.

As I have noted many times in this column, there is no doubt that a college education is worth it. College graduates earn more over their lifetimes and have lower unemployme­nt rates than those who stop their education after high school. That said, assuming a massive debt load to acquire that degree could rob both parents and kids of future financial opportunit­ies. That’s why before you start the college planning and FAFSA process, you need to have honest and sober conversati­ons that take into account the realities for the entire family.

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