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Learn how to quickly peform common financial aid tasks and get answers to questions.
Your financial aid award is the amount of funding for which you qualify, including federal aid, scholarships, loans, and other forms of assistance. Once Morehouse processes your award, you can view it through Banner Web.
How to See Your Missing Financial Aid Requirements
Your financial aid award cannot be processed until you complete all of the requirements, like filing your FAFSA or completing the verification procedures. You can find out what is missing through Banner Web.
Your “account” is a overall snapshot of your charges and aid applied. This information is available, by term, through Banner Web.
Your eligibility depends on your Expected Family Contribution, your year in school, your enrollment status, and the cost of attendance at the school you will be attending. 鶹 determines how much financial aid you are eligible to receive.
Your EFC is an index number that 鶹 Office of Financial Aid & Scholarships use to determine how much financial aid you would receive if you were to attend. The information you report on your FAFSA form is used to calculate your EFC.
The EFC is calculated according to a formula established by law. Your family’s taxed and untaxed income, assets, and benefits (such as unemployment or Social Security) all could be considered in the formula. Also considered are your family size and the number of family members who will attend college or career school during the year. e shows exactly how an EFC is calculated.
Your COA is the amount it will cost you to go to school. 鶹 will calculate your COA to show your total cost for the school year (for instance, for the fall semester plus the spring semester).
If you’re attending at least half-time, your COA is the estimate of
Cost of Attendance (COA) − Expected Family Contribution (EFC) = Financial Need
Need-based aid is financial aid that you can receive if you have financial need and meet other eligibility criteria. You can’t receive more need-based aid than the amount of your financial need. For instance, if your COA is $16,000 and your EFC is 12000, your financial need is $4,000; so you aren’t eligible for more than $4,000 in need-based aid.
The following are the need-based federal student aid programs:
鶹 determines how much non-need-based aid you can get by using this formula:
Cost of Attendance (COA) − Financial Aid Awarded So Far* = Eligibility for Non-need-based Aid
*includes aid from all sources, such as the school, private scholarship providers, etc.
Non-need-based aid is financial aid that is not based on your EFC. What matters is your COA and how much other assistance you’ve been awarded so far. For instance, if your COA is $16,000 and you’ve been awarded a total of $4,000 in need-based aid and private scholarships, you can get up to $12,000 in non-need-based aid.
The following are the non-need-based federal student aid programs: