FAFSA Application Information
Attendance Dates | FAFSA Year | FAFSA Submission Period | Tax Year |
Fall 2024 Spring 2025 Summer 2025 |
2024 - 2025 |
October 1, 2023 to June 30, 2025 |
2022 |
Fall 2025 Spring 2026 Summer 2026 |
2025 - 2026 |
December 1, 2024 to June 30, 2026 |
2023 |
The Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA, is the first step in the financial aid process. Use it to apply for federal student financial aid such as the Pell Grant, student loans, and college work-study. In addition, most states and schools use FAFSA information to award state or institution-level financial aid.
If you'll be attending Collin College, you will need to include our school code on
the FAFSA application.
Collin's school code is: 016792
The Dept. of Education enters your FAFSA responses into a formula (known as the Federal Methodology), which is regulated by the Higher Education Act of 1965, as amended. The result is your Student Aid Index, or SAI. The SAI is an index number calculated from the information submitted on the FAFSA and is used to determine the types of aid you might be eligible for.
Your SAI will be subtracted from the Cost of Attendance at the school you plan to attend to determine your exact eligibility for federal student aid.
FAFSA will send you a report (or a link to the report), called a FAFSA Submission Summary (FSS) by e-mail or by postal mail depending on the addresses they have on file for you. The FSS lists the information you reported on your FAFSA. In the upper right of the front page of the FSS, you'll find a figure called the SAI (Student Aid Index). Schools determine your eligibility for different types of aid using the SAI.
At the same time, FAFSA will send your information to the school code(s) you entered on the application.
Once the school receives your FAFSA data, there may be additional forms to fill out, clarification needed on one or more of your answers, or tax documents to collect. (These are just a few examples of additional processes that could be flagged by FAFSA or by the institution based on federal requirements.)
You will be notified of any requirements via the email you put on the FAFSA as well
as being posted in the My Tasks section of your workday account.
IMPORTANT NOTE: While it is common for students to put more than one school code on their FAFSA
when applying early (because they may not know at that point which school they will
attend) please submit follow-up paperwork to just one school. Students CANNOT RECEIVE
FINANCIAL AID FROM MORE THAN ONE SCHOOL AT A TIME, and so submitting paperwork to
more than one school can cause all sorts of issues by having more than one school
processing them for aid, including owing back ALL monies disbursed.
This includes situations where you are actually attending two schools at the same time. You must choose one school to receive aid from, and then follow up with them only.
Schools use your SAI to prepare a financial aid package (grants, loans, and/or work-study) to help you meet your financial need. Financial need is the difference between your SAI and your school's cost of attendance (COA), which can include living expenses.
Specific amounts and types of aid depend on a wide variety of elements in addition to the need calculation.
For example, many types of grant aid only pay for the exact number of credit hours you are attending. Usually, the more credit hours (up to full time), the more money you receive. Also, some grants will pay out something for as little as 1, 2 or even 3 hours (depending on your SAI and the grant).
DIrect student loans, however, are a little different. Students must be attending at least half time hours (in classes on their degree plan) as determined by their school in order to receive the loan money. Students who do not attend at least half time or drop below half time during the semester could forfeit all or some of their student loan money.
In some cases, if you meet the college's priority deadline for financial aid, you
may qualify for additional state grant monies. This also depends on other eligibility
factors such as your SAI and academic standing. (Note: "meeting the priority deadline"
is defined as the school having a correct and accurate FAFSA and all other required
paperwork by the specified date.)
Note: Collin College uses the State of Texas' priority deadline of January 15th.
Finally, the federal government puts limits on the annual amount of funds that can be disbursed and, in some cases, such as with student loans, limits on the life-time amounts and grade-level amounts that can be disbursed. This means that if you have reached your limit for that year, you will not receive any additional aid in that category until the following academic year.
The answer to this question depends on a couple of different factors.
The Dept of Education states that as long as a student is admitted into an eligible program at the college, the student can take remedial classes and still be eligible for their financial aid; even if the student is taking all remedial classes before taking any regular courses.
The caveats to this statement are as follows:
- The student MUST be admitted into an eligible program. This means that if the student
is enrolled solely in a remedial program, they would not be considered in an eligible
program. This typically happens when a college makes acceptance into an eligible program
contingent on completion of the remedial course work.
- Students are eligible for up to one academic year's worth of remedial coursework.
Meaning, students can take a maximum of up to 30 semester hours of remedial coursework and still be eligible for financial
aid. A student is NO LONGER eligible for financial aid for any remedial coursework
taken above the 30 hour limit.
- Similar to other remedial coursework, a student may receive FSA funds for ESL courses that are a part of a larger eligible program. ESL courses do NOT count against the one year limitation on remedial coursework mentioned above.
If you have been awarded aid and have accepted it (where applicable), and all financial aid requirements are completed (such as a loan MPN and entrance counseling), students will receive an email indicating that they have monies available to spend in the bookstore. At the point a student receives the email, they can go to the bookstore on any campus and "charge" books and supplies against their financial aid.
However, in order to do so, students must first meet certain criteria:
- Students must first log into their Workday portal and agree to using their financial
aid for this purpose and allow the business office to deduct the purchase amounts
from their financial aid award (i.e. post a charge on the student's account), and
- Generally, students are given a maximum amount they can spend at the bookstore based
partially on the amount they may have remaining in their account after tuition and
fees have been deducted from their financial aid award, and
- Students can only charge during the allotted time frame for bookstore charges. Please
see the Financial Aid Calendar located here for exact dates.
Realize that you do not have to charge your books and supplies to your aid. You are always welcome to pay for your books and supplies on your own.
Note: Students who have not been awarded by the end of the bookstore charge period will have to purchase books and supplies using their own resources.
Again, this depends on a variety of factors.
- If you met the college's priority deadline, you are guaranteed to have an estimated* financial aid award posted to your account by the payment deadline for that semester. (However, this does not mean you are eligible for the types and/or amounts of aid you wish to receive.) If you are one of these students, this estimated aid may post weeks before the payment deadline and will first be used to pay tuition, fees, book store charges, etc.
- This estimated award will be adjusted to your actual award on the census date of the
school and is based on your actual enrollment and attendance at that time. The census
date at Collin is the 12th class day in fall and spring, and the 7th class day in
summer. A "snapshot" of all students' enrollment is taken at the close of business
on that date and that is the official enrollment on which your aid is based. Because
schools must wait until the census date to adjust students' aid, no refunds can be
disbursed prior to this date.
Learn more about Collin College's Census Date.
Based on the above information, the first round of refund checks (or direct deposit) mails out according to the refund schedule on the Financial Aid Calendar.
For information on when your money will disburse if you're in mini-sessions (i.e., express classes), please see the next section below.
For students who are enrolled in mini-sessions, also called express classes, your financial aid money WILL NOT DISBURSE until approximately ten days after the class has started. This is generally applicable regardless of the type of aid you are receiving.
- For example: If a student registers for 12 hours or 4 classes at the beginning of the semester,
but only 3 of those classes start at the beginning of the semester and the final class
beginning two months later, the student would only receive his financial aid grant
for the 3 classes when the first disbursements are sent out. The money for the last
class would disburse on the first disbursement date AFTER the census date of that
class provided the professor verified the student's attendance.
- Using the same example above, if the student was receiving student loan funds, the first disbursement would go
out on time because students only need to be enrolled half-time in order to receive
student loan funds. So in this case, the late starting class would not effect the
student loan funds.
- Let's look at one more example: If a student enrolls in only 2 classes, or 6 hours, and one of those classes starts
at the beginning of the semester, but the other one doesn't start until a month and
a half later and the student is receiving student loan funds, the first disbursement
would NOT go out until after that second class began and the professor verified attendance.
This is because the student would not be half time until that mini-session began.
Generally, if you filed your FAFSA really late, there are a couple of possible scenarios.
- Since the Financial Aid Office processes files in the order in which they were received**,
if you filed late (but not, say, 1 month or less before classes begin), but still
submitted your paperwork near that date, there is a chance that your aid will be awarded
prior to payment deadline (although this cannot be guaranteed.) If that is the case,
the information in the section above will most likely apply to you.
- If your aid has not posted to your account prior to payment deadline, you will be responsible for paying your balance before or at that time. However, we will continue to process your file in order and if your aid posts by census date, your refund will probably go out in the first check run as described in the section above, although loans may take longer due to additional processing requirements.
*We use the term "estimated financial aid award" because students are initially awarded aid based on full-time enrollment. Because aid is adjusted on census date to the actual enrollment/attendance, the actual award may be less than that initial amount.
**The date a file is assigned for processing is based on the date the last piece of information or last form was submitted. A file is not considered ready to process until all required information has been submitted. For this reason, it is very important that students check their Workday portal and/or collin.edu email frequently and submit any required forms or information as soon as possible.