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Positioning Your Income and Assets to Enhance Financial Aid Eligibility
There are a number of strategies you can implement to try to enhance your child's federal aid eligibility. These strategies take advantage of
the rules regarding which income and assets are counted in
determining financial need. Note: The FAFSA relies on current asset information but income information from two years prior, which is referred to as the "prior-prior year" or the "base year." For example, the 2025-2026 FAFSA relies on your 2023 tax return, so 2023 is the prior-prior year.
Strategies to reduce income
- Time the receipt of discretionary income to avoid the base year
- Have your child limit his or her income for the base year to the amount of the student
income protection allowance
Strategies to reduce assets
- Use cash (an assessable asset) to pay down consumer debt, which is not counted in
the federal methodology
- Use cash to make large planned purchases the year before your child starts college
- Use counted assets to pay down your mortgage, which increases your home equity (an
excludable asset)
- Shift counted assets above your asset protection allowance (a sum automatically
excluded from consideration) to assets excluded by the federal methodology (e.g.,
home equity, retirement plans, cash value life insurance, annuities)
- Use your child's assets to pay for the first year of college, which reduces (for
subsequent years) the student asset contribution factored into the formula
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