The FAFSA Simplification Act
August 4, 2022
The Higher Education Act of 1965 (HEA; P.L. 89-329, as amended), authorizes numerous
federal aid programs that provide support to both individuals pursuing a postsecondary education
Benjamin Collins
and institutions of higher education (IHEs). Title IV of the HEA authorizes the primary sources
Analyst in Labor Policy
of postsecondary federal student aid, including Pell Grants and Direct Loans. Students apply for
federal student aid by completing the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). There
Cassandria Dortch
have been several long-standing concerns that the length and complexity of the FAFSA, and the
Specialist in Education
lack of transparency and predictability its use provides for students and their families, may
Policy
discourage postsecondary educational access and attainment.
The FAFSA Simplification Act (FSA; Title VII, Division FF of P.L. 116-260) makes significant
changes to the underlying processes and methodologies for determining federal student aid
eligibility. As originally enacted, the FSA had a general effective date of July 1, 2023. In March 2022, the FAFSA
Simplification Act Technical Corrections Act (FSATCA) was enacted as Division R of the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2022 (P.L. 117-103). The law pushed the general effective date for the FSA back one year, to July 1, 2024, coinciding with
the beginning of the 2024-2025 award year. Both the original FSA and the FSATCA authorized ED to implement certain
provisions prior to the general effective date.
The FSA amendments retain need analysis formulas that establish an indicator of what the student’s family is expected to pay
for higher education based on information provided on the FAFSA. The FSA amends the indicator’s name from
expected
family contribution (EFC) to
student aid index (SAI). The SAI has fewer formula factors than the EFC, requires fewer
questions on the FAFSA, and permits a higher share of FAFSA responses to be imported from a federal income tax return.
To make the student aid process more predictable for low-income students, the FSA amendments establish a new policy by
which students with an adjusted gross income (AGI) below specified levels can automatically qualify for a maximum Pell
Grant. The AGI threshold is either 175% or 225% of federal poverty guidelines, depending on the student’s dependency
status and marital status. In the case of a dependent student, the marital status criteria and AGI threshold are applied to the
student’s parent(s).
Students who do not qualify for a Pell Grant based on their AGI can still qualify for a Pell Grant based on their calculated
SAI. Students who qualify for a maximum Pell Grant based on their AGI qualify for an SAI of zero or, in certain cases, a
negative SAI. The SAI of these students establishes eligibility for maximum amounts of other forms of need-based federal
student aid.
The FSA amendments make additional changes to the award rules and some eligibility criteria for the Pell Grant program.
For students enrolled less than full-time, their Pell Grant will be reduced in proportion to their actual enrollment rate (e.g., 11
credits out of 12 full-time credits) instead of their tiered enrollment rate (e.g., less than full-time but at least three-quarter-
time). With respect to eligibility, the FSA amendments eliminate the prohibition against students incarcerated in a federal or
state penal institution receiving a Pell Grant, but require that Pell Grant recipients in a correctional institution be enrolled in
prison education programs. These programs must meet all of the HEA Title IV program eligibility requirements and
additional requirements, many of which are intended to help incarcerated individuals seek further education or employment
upon release.
The FSA amendments expand student aid access by eliminating prohibitions for students with certain drug-related offenses
and students who failed to register for the Selective Service. The FSA amendments modify procedures by which certain
student populations can establish independent student status and not provide parental information on the FAFSA.
The FSA amendments provided relief to borrowers of loans made through two HEA loan programs. It repealed the Direct
Loan program’s Subsidized Usage Limit Applies (SULA) requirement so eligible undergraduate students who borrow Direct
Subsidized Loans retain their interest subsidy despite remaining enrolled for a period that exceeds 150% of the published
length of their academic program. The FSA amendments also directed ED to repay the outstanding balances on Historically
Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) Capital Financing loan amounts that had been disbursed to eligible institutions as of
December 27, 2020. ED made the SULA repeal effective August 13, 2021, and discharged approximately $1.6 billion of debt
for 45 HBCUs in April 2021.
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The FAFSA Simplification Act
Contents
Introduction ..................................................................................................................................... 1
Background and Framework for the HEA Prior to the FSA Amendments Going into
Effect ............................................................................................................................................ 1
Effective Date and Extension .......................................................................................................... 2
EFC Renamed as Student Aid Index ............................................................................................... 3
Needs Analysis: Changes to the FAFSA Process and Aid Eligibility Calculations ......................... 3
Zero and Negative SAI .............................................................................................................. 4
Automatic SAI Determinations ................................................................................................. 4
Students Exempt from Reporting Assets ................................................................................... 5
Changes to Financial Factors and the Calculation Process ....................................................... 5
Changes to Financial Factors: Reduction of Factors .......................................................... 5
Changes to the Calculation Process .................................................................................... 6
Codification of Income Data from the Second Preceding Year .......................................... 8
Modifications to Family Definitions in FAFSA Formulas ........................................................ 8
Dependent Students with Divorced or Separated Parents ................................................... 8
Determination of Family Size ............................................................................................. 9
Student Race and Ethnicity ....................................................................................................... 9
Integration with the FUTURE Act ............................................................................................ 9
Professional Judgement for Students with Special or Unusual Circumstances ............................. 10
Adjustments to Financial Factors ............................................................................................. 11
Dependency Overrides ............................................................................................................. 11
Provisional Independent Student ....................................................................................... 11
Professional Judgement During a Disaster, Emergency, or Economic Downturn .................. 12
Pell Grant Provisions ..................................................................................................................... 12
Modifications to Pell Grant Award Rules ................................................................................ 13
Scheduled Award Prior to the FSA Amendments Taking Effect ....................................... 13
Scheduled Award Under the FSA Amendments ................................................................ 13
Award Calculation for Less Than Full-Time Students ...................................................... 16
Expansion of Minimum Federal Pell Grant Award for Less Than Full-Time
Students.......................................................................................................................... 16
Pell Grants for Incarcerated Persons ....................................................................................... 17
Year-Round (Summer) Pell Grants ......................................................................................... 18
Restoration of Pell Grant Eligibility ........................................................................................ 18
Changes to Pell Grant Authorizations and Appropriations ..................................................... 19
Changes to Policies or Procedures for Specific Populations ......................................................... 19
Procedures for Homeless Students and Foster Youth .............................................................. 19
Homeless Students and Students At Risk of Homelessness ............................................. 20
Procedures for Foster Care Youth ..................................................................................... 20
Procedures for Veterans of the Armed Forces ......................................................................... 20
Procedures for Children of Deceased Servicemembers and Public Safety Officers ............... 21
Effect of Drug Convictions and Draft Registration on Student Eligibility ............................. 22
Sharing of Student Information ..................................................................................................... 22
Other Changes to Institution-Level Administration and Aid Packaging ....................................... 23
Verification .............................................................................................................................. 23
Estimated Financial Assistance ............................................................................................... 23
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The FAFSA Simplification Act
Cost of Attendance .................................................................................................................. 24
Other Provisions ............................................................................................................................ 24
Early Awareness and Outreach Efforts .................................................................................... 25
Repeal of the Subsidized Usage Limit Applies Requirement ................................................. 25
HBCU Capital Financing Loan Repayment ............................................................................ 26
Figures
Figure 1. Pell Grant Thresholds for Award Amounts Under the FAFSA Simplification
Act, by Dependency and Marital Status ..................................................................................... 15
Contacts
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 26
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The FAFSA Simplification Act
Introduction
Title IV of the Higher Education Act of 1965 (HEA; P.L. 89-329, as amended) authorizes the
primary sources of federal aid to support postsecondary education students. Title IV programs
made over $112 billion in aid available to postsecondary students in FY2021 through Direct
Loans and other forms of aid, including $26 billion in Pell Grants.1 The FAFSA Simplification
Act (FSA; Title VII, Division FF of P.L. 116-260, Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021), as
amended, makes significant changes to the underlying processes and methodologies for
determining student eligibility for federal student aid authorized by Title IV.2
The FSA is intended principally to address several long-standing concerns with the HEA Title IV
federal student aid application process. Specifically, the current process has been criticized for
being too complicated to navigate, with the length and complexity of the Free Application for
Federal Student Aid (FAFSA)—the instrument students use to apply for federal student aid—
being consistent targets of the criticism. The student aid application and award process has also
been criticized for lacking transparency and predictability for students and their families. This is
because the methodology for calculating award amounts is opaque. In addition, students are not
aware of how much federal aid they may be eligible for until an institution of higher education
(IHE) to which they have been admitted provides an award letter. As a result, critics of the current
system argue that students and their families may be discouraged from applying for aid and
consequently may be discouraged from pursuing postsecondary education.3
To address these issues, the FSA aims to streamline the application and need assessment
procedures for federal student aid. Eligible low-income students will be able to qualify for a
maximum Pell Grant and other forms of need-based aid based on a single financial indicator
(adjusted gross income [AGI]) and procedures are streamlined for other students. The FSA
amendments expand eligibility for Pell Grants and other forms of student aid and establish a
number of procedural changes, many of which are directed at easing access to aid for specific
student populations.
This report begins with brief background on the HEA and administration of the FSA. It then
focuses on the FSA’s changes to the student aid application process, associated formulas for
calculating student need, and the Pell Grant program. The final sections include descriptions of
FSA provisions affecting Direct Subsidized Loans for students and the Historically Black
Colleges and Universities Capital Financing program for eligible institutions.
Background and Framework for the HEA Prior to
the FSA Amendments Going into Effect
To be eligible for any HEA Title IV federal student aid, a student or prospective student must
complete the FAFSA. In addition to specified financial information, the FAFSA collects
1 U.S. Department of Education, President’s Budget Request FY2023, Student Aid Overview, p. 3. Available aid
includes institutional matching funds but excludes loans issued to consolidate existing loans (Consolidation Loans). For
more information on Title IV aid programs, see CRS Report R43351,
The Higher Education Act (HEA): A Primer.
2 The FSA, as originally enacted, was amended by the FAFSA Simplification Act Technical Corrections Act, Division
R of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022 (P.L. 117-103).
3 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions,
Time to Finish Fixing the FAFSA, 116th
Cong., 2nd sess., September 17, 2020, Opening Remarks by Senators Lamar Alexander and Patty Murray.
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The FAFSA Simplification Act
information regarding the student’s citizenship, the student’s prior educational achievement, and
a range of personal and family characteristics. Information on income, assets, and other
characteristics provided on the FAFSA is used to calculate the student’s expected family
contribution (EFC) toward postsecondary education based on multipart statutory formulas. The
HEA establishes three EFC formulas: one each for (1) dependent students, (2) independent
students without dependents, and (3) independent students with dependents.4 The formula for
dependent students considers the financial resources of the student’s parents while the formulas
for independent students do not.
Under the HEA, a student is determined to be independent if the student meets any of a list of
criteria, including (but not limited to) being 24 years of age on January 1 of the award year, being
married, having dependents, or being a veteran of the Armed Forces.5 Students who do not meet
any of the independent student criteria are determined to be dependent and must report parental
information.6
Eligibility for many federal student aid programs is contingent on student financial need. Under
current law, student need is defined as the difference between the student’s cost of attendance
(COA) as determined by the school and the sum of the student’s EFC and estimated financial
assistance (EFA).7 COA is an estimate of a student’s educational expenses for the period of
enrollment. Generally, EFA includes most scholarships, grants, loans, or other assistance known
to the school at the time the determination of the student’s need is made. Students with a zero
EFC may qualify for the maximum amount of need-based federal student aid, including a
maximum Pell Grant.8
Effective Date and Extension
As originally enacted in December 2021, the FSA had a general effective date of July 1, 2023,
coinciding with the beginning of the 2023-2024 award year, and remaining in effect for each
subsequent award year. In limited instances, the July 1, 2023, date served as a deadline for the
implementation of certain provisions, and the FSA granted ED the authority to implement
specified provisions earlier. For an earlier implementation, ED was required to publish
notification of such implementation in the
Federal Register not less than 60 days before
implementation.
In March 2022, the FAFSA Simplification Act Technical Corrections Act (FSATCA) was enacted
as Division R of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022 (P.L. 117-103). The law pushed the
general effective date for the FSA back one year, to July 1, 2024, coinciding with the beginning of
the 2024-2025 award year.
The FSATCA granted ED the authority to implement certain provisions of the FSA “on or after
July 1, 2023, but not later than July 1, 2024.” The FSATCA further specifies that if ED does
implement any of these provisions prior to July 1, 2024, ED shall publish notification of such
implementation in the
Federal Register not less than 60 days before implementation. The
4 For a detailed description of the formulas prior to the effective date of the FSA, see CRS Report R44503,
Federal
Student Aid: Need Analysis Formulas and Expected Family Contribution.
5 See HEA §480(d) for full criteria.
6 In limited cases, students who do not meet any of the independent student criteria may qualify for independent student
status via a dependency override.
7 HEA §471, as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA.
8 Prior to the effective date of the FSA, students may not receive federal aid in excess of COA. See, for example, HEA
§§401(b)(3), 401(b)(5), 420M(c)(2), 420R(d)(3), 428B(b), and 428H(c).
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provisions of the FSA that the FSATCA authorized ED to implement prior to the new effective
date are different from the provisions that the original FSA authorized ED to implement prior to
July 1, 2023.
EFC Renamed as Student Aid Index
The FSA amendments replace the EFC with a new indicator:
student aid index (SAI). The SAI is
similar to the EFC: both metrics are a dollar amount that synthesizes personal and financial
characteristics to estimate the ability of an applicant to pay for postsecondary education.9 While
there are a number of differences in the details, the general procedures in calculating the EFC and
SAI are similar.10 The remainder of this report will use EFC when referring to provisions in effect
prior to the effective date of the FSA as amended by FSATCA amendments and SAI when
referring to provisions under the FSA as amended by FSATCA amendments.
Needs Analysis: Changes to the FAFSA Process and
Aid Eligibility Calculations
The FSA amendments retain the existing system of using information supplied on the FAFSA to
establish an indicator of the capacity of a student’s family to pay for postsecondary education that
informs subsequent aid eligibility. The new SAI formulas maintain most of the major components
of the three existing EFC formulas, though the FSA amendments make a number of changes to
specific factors and procedures, usually with an objective of simplifying calculations or
expanding aid for lower-income students.
Length of the FAFSA and Effect of the FSA Amendments
Both before and after the FSA amendments take effect, the number of questions an applicant must complete when
filing the FAFSA is impacted by the student’s dependency status, whether the student qualifies for a streamlined
calculation, and how ED translates statutory provisions into individual questions.
Some descriptions of the FSA amendments reference a reduction in the number of questions on the FAFSA once
the law is implemented. These descriptions anticipate a reduction in questions primarily due to the reduction of
formula factors as specified by the FSA amendments (see the
“Changes to Financial Factors: Reduction of Factors” section) and the implementation of the data-sharing provisions under the FUTURE Act (P.L. 116-91), which, when
implemented, wil require applicants to consent to have their tax information disclosed rather than requiring them
to provide such information (see the
“Integration with the FUTURE Act” section). The increased alignment of
certain formula components with tax definitions may further reduce the amount of information that must be
provided directly by applicants.
The elimination of disqualifications for students who did not register with the Selective Service or who had certain
drug-related convictions (see the
“Effect of Drug Convictions and Draft Registration on Student Eligibility” section) wil also eliminate the need for the related questions on the FAFSA. New policies related to granting
consent under the FUTURE Act and col ecting certain demographic information wil add new questions.
9 This report will use the term
applicant to refer to persons who are required to provide information on a student’s
FAFSA. In the case of a dependent student,
applicant includes the student as well as the student’s parent or parents. In
the case of an independent student,
applicant includes the student and the student’s spouse, if applicable.
10 Both the EFC and SAI follow the general procedure of calculating total income, subtracting specified allowances,
and then assessing a percentage of available income. In cases where assets are considered, similar procedures are
followed for assets under both the EFC and SAI calculations.
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Zero and Negative SAI
Under current law, a student’s EFC cannot be less than zero dollars.11 Under the FSA
amendments, the SAI can be as low as -$1,500.
A negative SAI can provide differentiation among the share of the students who, under current
law, may all have an EFC of zero. This differentiation among low-income students can help
schools more precisely target federal campus-based aid as well as institutional aid.
A negative SAI will not entitle a student to a larger Pell Grant compared to a student with a zero
SAI. Both students will qualify for a maximum Pell Grant. Because a negative SAI establishes
student need greater than COA, the FSA amendments create a framework in which it may be
possible for some students to receive aid in excess of COA.12
Automatic SAI Determinations
The HEA currently establishes an “automatic zero” EFC provision for applicants who report an
AGI below a specified level ($27,000 in the 2021-2022 award year) and meet other criteria.13
Such applicants are not required to answer additional income or asset questions on their FAFSA.
The FSA amendments eliminate the automatic zero EFC provisions and replace them with special
rules that establish a zero or negative SAI for some students:14
Independent students who are not required to file a tax return, or dependent
students whose parents are not required to do so, automatically qualify for an SAI
of -$1,500.
Students who qualify for a maximum Pell Grant based on a qualifying AGI
qualify for a zero SAI (see the
“Scheduled Award Under the FSA Amendments”).
If the student’s calculated SAI is less than zero, the negative SAI applies.15
Students whose SAI is not determined under either of these special rules will have their SAI
calculated based on the formulas in the statute.
11 This requirement is established in the respective sections of the HEA that establish the EFC formula for each
dependency status. For example, see HEA Section 476(a)(3) for language related to independent students without
dependents.
12 Statute specifies that Pell Grants and Direct Loans may not exceed COA, so a student with a $0 SAI and a student
with a negative SAI would be eligible for the same amount of these forms of aid, assuming all other circumstances are
the same. Depending on how ED interprets the totality of the FSA and other existing provisions of the HEA, it is
possible that students with a negative SAI may qualify for other forms of aid in excess of COA.
13 HEA §479(c), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA. For the current threshold, see EFC Formula Guide for
AY2022-2023 at https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-08/2223EFCFormulaGuide.pdf.
14 HEA §473, as amended by the FSA.
15 The construction of these provisions suggests that students who qualify for a maximum Pell Grant based on AGI will
still have an SAI calculated under the full formula to determine if they qualify for a negative SAI. This means that these
students will have to provide all the information necessary to calculate their SAI. When the FUTURE Act is
implemented, students will be able to authorize the IRS to disclose the components of the FAFSA that are based on tax
information directly to ED for the purposes of completing the FAFSA. See the
“Integration with the FUTURE Act”
section later in this report.
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Students Exempt from Reporting Assets
Until the FSA amendments take effect, the HEA establishes a
simplified needs test (SNT) for
applicants with an adjusted gross income below $50,000 and who meet other criteria that relate to
filing tax forms that are typically associated with a simple return or being in receipt of specified
federal means-tested benefits.16 Students who qualify for the SNT are not required to report asset
information on the FAFSA for the purposes of determining federal student aid eligibility.
The FSA amendments eliminate the SNT terminology and modify the criteria to exempt certain
applicants from asset reporting. Under the FSA amendments, the AGI threshold increases to
$60,000. The FSA amendments establish that eligible tax returns are those in which an applicant
does not file specified tax schedules or files schedules within certain parameters. Applicants can
continue to be exempt from reporting assets based on receiving a federal means-tested benefit.17
Changes to Financial Factors and the Calculation Process
The FSA amendments reduce the number of factors to be considered when determining the ability
of a student’s family to contribute to higher education costs. The FSA amendments also make a
number of adjustments to the calculation process.
Changes to Financial Factors: Reduction of Factors
The EFC formulas consider AGI as well as specified forms of
untaxed income and
excludable
income. Untaxed income increases the applicant’s total income and can correspondingly increase
the EFC. Conversely, excludable income reduces available income and can reduce the EFC.
The FSA amendments reduce the forms of untaxed income and excludable income that are
considered in calculating the SAI.18 This has the effect of reducing the amount of financial
information that a student must provide when completing the FAFSA and reducing the number of
factors in the underlying formula. Due to the multifaceted nature of many of the factors and the
incremental nature of some of the changes, it is difficult to discern exactly how many factors
were eliminated.19
Among the forms of untaxed income that will no longer be considered are “cash support or any
money paid on the student’s behalf.” Prior to the FSA taking effect, the classification of this type
of support as a form of untaxed income (which excludes support from dependent students’
parents) meant that the EFC considered support from individuals who are not required to report
information on the FAFSA, such as contributions from grandparents. This type of support will no
longer be considered in the SAI formula after the FSA takes effect.
16 HEA §479, as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA. For additional details, see EFC Formula Guide under
“Which students qualify for the simplified EFC formulas?,” at https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-08/
2223EFCFormulaGuide.pdf.
17 For full details, including applicable schedules, see HEA Section 479, as amended by the FSA.
18 In most cases, these changes are made by amending definitions of applicable terms in HEA Section 480.
19 For example, the FSA amendments eliminate HEA Section 480(b), which includes a provision for “any other
untaxed income and benefits” that provides four examples of income that could be considered under this provision and
then explicitly excludes six other forms of untaxed income. Another example of complexity is that the HEA prior to the
enactment of the FSA amendments included tax-deferred contributions to retirement accounts as untaxed income and
the FSA amendments retain some, but not all, of these contributions as untaxed income.
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The FSA amendments eliminate “child support received” as a form of untaxed income but adds it
as an asset.20 This means that only applicants who are not exempt from reporting assets will need
to report child support received.
The FSA amendments reduce the forms of excludable income that are considered in the
calculation of the SAI. Under the FSA amendments, the only forms of excludable income that are
required to be reported in the formula are specified federal education tax credits.21 The FSA
amendments also allow (but do not require) certain forms of education-related income to be
reported as excludable income at the option of the applicant.22
Changes to the Calculation Process
Income Protection Allowance
The EFC formulas establish an
income protection allowance (IPA) that serves as one of several
allowances that reduce the amount of income that is subsequently considered in the EFC
calculation. The IPA can vary by dependency status, family size, and the number of family
members in college. IPA levels are adjusted each year based on inflation. Because the formula for
dependent students calculates separate contributions for the student and the student’s parents and
then combines them, there are separate IPAs for dependent students and parents of dependent
students.
The FSA amendments increase IPA levels. These increases effectively protect a larger amount of
income, reducing the amount of income that is considered in calculating the SAI. The FSA
amendments also streamline IPAs across dependency statuses so they will no longer vary by the
number of family members in college.
For dependent students, the FSA amendments increase the IPA levels for the parents of dependent
students approximately 20% above their current levels for families with one student in college.23
For dependent students themselves, the FSA amendments increase the IPA levels about 35%
above their current levels. For independent students without dependents, the FSA increases the
IPA levels about 35% above their current levels.
For independent students with dependents, the FSA amendments establish separate IPA levels for
married and single students. For married independent students with dependents, the FSA
amendments establish the IPA levels at about 35% above their current levels for families with one
member in college. For single independent students with dependents, the FSA amendments
establish the IPA levels at about 60% above their current levels for families with one member in
college.24
20 See the definition of
assets in HEA Section 480(f) as amended by the FSA.
21 Specifically, the sum of the American Opportunity Tax Credit and the Lifelong Learning Credit as described in
paragraphs (1) and (2) of Section 25A of the Internal Revenue Code. Considering amounts of these credits as
excludable income offsets any reduction in tax liability and corresponding reduction in allowances against income for
federal taxes paid.
22 HEA §480(e)(2), as amended by the FSA. Because excludable income reduces available income, reporting this
information, if applicable, will reduce a student’s SAI.
23 The increase in IPA level for parents of dependent students with more than one family member in college is a little
more difficult to characterize in a concise manner, but it will effectively be greater than 20%. For current levels, see
EFC Formula Guide for AY2022-2023 at https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-08/
2223EFCFormulaGuide.pdf.
24 The increase in IPA level for independent students with dependents and more than one family member in college is a
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The FSA specifies that the codified IPA levels will be further adjusted for inflation between April
2020 and the April in the year prior to the award year.25
Allowance for State and Other Taxes
The EFC formulas establish an allowance for state and other taxes. Like other allowances against
income, this one reduces the amount of income that is considered in the calculation of the EFC.
The allowance is calculated as a percentage of total income. The percentage varies by state,
ranging from 1% to 9% in the 2022-2023 award year.26
The FSA amendments eliminate the allowance for state and other taxes.
Employment Expense Allowance
The EFC formulas establish an employment expense allowance for some applicants. The
allowance reduces income considered in the EFC calculation by the amount of the allowance. The
allowance is calculated through a formula and the maximum employment expense allowance is
$4,000.
The allowance may be applied to the income of parents of dependent students and to independent
students with dependents and married independent students without dependents. Single
independent students without dependents are ineligible for this allowance.
With regard to married parents of dependent students and married independent students, the
allowance is only available where both spouses have earnings. Married couples of any
dependency status in which one spouse has no earnings do not qualify for this allowance.
The FSA amendments modify the allowance so that it is calculated based on total earnings
reported on a tax return. This construction allows married couples in which one spouse does not
have earnings to qualify for this allowance. The FSA amendments do not modify the maximum
allowance amount or its exclusion of single independent students without dependents.
Families with More Than One Member in College
The HEA establishes that one of the final steps of the EFC formulas is to divide the EFC by the
number of family members “who are enrolled or accepted for enrollment” in an eligible
postsecondary program.27 This policy has the effect of significantly reducing the EFC of families
in years where multiple members are simultaneously enrolled in higher education.28
The FSA amendments eliminate the provisions that divide the expected contribution by the
number of family members enrolled. Under this change, each student from a family with multiple
little more difficult to characterize in a concise manner, but it will effectively be greater than 35% for married students
and greater than 60% for single students.
25 See HEA Section 478(b), as amended by the FSA, for the adjustment process.
26 Listed percentages apply to applicants with total income of $15,000 or more. See Table A1 of 2022-2023 EFC
Formula Guide at https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2021-08/2223EFCFormulaGuide.pdf.
27 See HEA Section 475(b)(3) for dependent students, HEA Section 476(a)(2) for independent students without
dependents, and HEA Section 477(a)(3) for independent students with dependents. For dependent students, (1) this
policy excludes parents of the student who may be enrolled and (2) only the parental contribution is divided by the
number of enrolled family members.
28 Certain elements of the EFC formulas mean that the EFC of each member of a family with two members in college
may be slightly more or less than 50% of the EFC of a student from an identical family with one member in college.
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applicable members enrolled will have the same parental contribution as a student from an
otherwise identical family with only one member enrolled.
Codification of Income Data from the Second Preceding Year
The EFC formulas specify that the EFC calculations will consider tax information and other
income information from “the preceding tax year.” The HEA, however, further allows that “the
Secretary may provide for the use of data from the second preceding tax year when and to the
extent necessary to carry out the simplification of applications.”29 ED has exercised this authority
since the 2017-2018 award year.30 For example, the FAFSA for the current 2022-2023 award year
was based on information from tax year 2020.
The FSA amends the statute to specify that the relevant AGI is “adjusted gross income for the
second preceding tax year.”31 This permanently codifies current practice.
Modifications to Family Definitions in FAFSA Formulas
The details of a student’s family situation can impact a student’s aid calculation. The FSA
amendments change how parental information is determined for students with divorced or
separated parents and modifies how a student’s family size is determined.
Dependent Students with Divorced or Separated Parents32
Until the FSA amendments takes effect, dependent students with divorced or separated parents
typically report only the financial information of the parent the student lived with more frequently
during the prior year. In cases in which the parent for whom the student reports information has
remarried, the information of the stepparent is included on the FAFSA.33
Under the FSA amendments, a student with divorced or separated parents will report information
on “the parent who provides the greater portion of the student’s financial support.”34 In cases
where the relevant parent is remarried, information on the stepparent will continue to be collected
on the FAFSA. (For discussion on determining whether the relevant parent qualifies as a
single
parent for Pell Grant purposes, see the
“Definition of Single Parent for Pell Grant Purposes” section.)
29 HEA §480(a)(1)(A)-(B), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
30 See, for example, U.S. Department of Education, “Changes Impacting the 2017-2018 FAFSA,” at
https://financialaidtoolkit.ed.gov/resources/fafsa-changes-17-18-faq.pdf.
31 For the definition of AGI as it applies to the SAI formulas, see HEA Section 480(a), as amended by the FSA. For the
definition of AGI as it applies to the Pell Grant calculation, see HEA Section 401(a)(2)(A), as amended by the FSA.
32 Generally, these provisions apply to all dependent students with parents who are not married to each other and do not
live together.
33 See HEA Section 475(f) for more detail. The EFC formulas treat unmarried parents who live together the same as
married parents.
34 HEA §475(f), as amended by the FSA.
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Determination of Family Size
Until the FSA amendments take effect, family size is determined by an HEA-specific definition.35
In some cases, individuals who would be considered dependents (and therefore included in family
size) under the HEA definition may not be considered dependents under the federal tax code.
The FSA amends the HEA so that family size can be determined based on the tax return that
informs other components of the FAFSA (i.e., the return from the second preceding tax year). For
dependent students, family size is determined to be the parents or parent of the student (and, if
applicable, stepparent) who reports information on the FAFSA as well as any dependent of the
student’s parents for the taxable year used in determining aid eligibility.36 In cases where the
dependent student is not included on the applicable parental tax return, the family size includes
the dependent student as well as any persons included on the applicable parental tax return. For
independent students, family size includes the student and, if applicable, the student’s spouse and
dependents on the student’s tax return for the taxable year used in determining aid eligibility.
The FSA amendments further direct ED to establish procedures for determining family size in
cases in which “information for the taxable year used in determining the amount of need of the
student for financial assistance under this title has changed or does not accurately reflect the
applicant’s current household size.”37
Student Race and Ethnicity
The FAFSA does not currently collect information on race/ethnicity. As such, administrative data
based on the FAFSA cannot be disaggregated by race.
The FSA amendments require ED to collect race/ethnicity data from all FAFSA applicants for
such applicants to be eligible for HEA Title IV aid.38
Integration with the FUTURE Act
Enacted in December 2019, the Fostering Undergraduate Talent by Unlocking Resources for
Education Act (FUTURE Act, P.L. 116-91) amended the HEA and the Internal Revenue Code
(IRC) to specify a process through which tax filers may provide authorization to the IRS to
disclose specified information from tax returns for the purposes of completing the FAFSA and
other authorized purposes.39 The data disclosure provisions of the FUTURE Act have not yet been
implemented.40
35 HEA §480(l).
36 For the purposes of family size, the FSA amendments define dependent as “within the meaning of section 152 of the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 or an eligible individual for purposes of the credit under section 24 of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986.” Section 24 authorizes the Child Tax Credit. For more information, see CRS Report R41873,
The Child Tax Credit: How It Works and Who Receives It.
37 HEA §480(k)(3), as amended by the FSA.
38 HEA §483(a)(2)(B)(ii)(VIII), as amended by the FSA.
39 For more information on the FUTURE Act, see CRS Report R46400,
The FUTURE Act (P.L. 116-91): Amendments
to the Higher Education Act and Internal Revenue Code. Provisions in Section 284 of P.L. 116-260 that are not part of
the FAFSA Simplification Act modify certain protections for taxpayer return information and relate to FUTURE Act
provisions in the IRC and HEA.
40 In its FY2023 Budget Justification, ED said “The implementation of the FUTURE Act and FAFSA Simplification
Act began in fiscal year 2020 and will continue through fiscal year 2023 when [ED’s Federal Student Aid Office] fully
implements the provisions of the FAFSA Simplification Act for the 2024–25 award year.” See U.S. Department of
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The FSA amendments update the data-sharing in the FUTURE Act by specifying that the FAFSA
will require students (and, if necessary, the parents, stepparents, or spouses of students) to grant
authorization to have their tax information disclosed to ED, state higher educational agencies,
institutions selected by the students, and designated scholarship organizations.41
Many of the changes to the financial factors and procedures used to calculate the SAI in the FSA
amendments may have been designed to optimize interaction with the FUTURE Act. For
example, most of the forms of untaxed income and excludable income that were eliminated were
factors that could not be imported from a tax return. Other procedures, such as determining
family size and determining if an applicant is exempt from reporting assets based on tax
schedules, have been designed so that determinations and calculations can be made largely (or
even entirely) on the basis of shared tax information, minimizing the need to request information
from applicants.
Professional Judgement for Students with Special or
Unusual Circumstances
Until the FSA amendments take effect, financial aid administrators (FAAs) are authorized to
“make adjustments on a case-by-case basis” to COA and values of data items used to calculate the
EFC. This process is known as professional judgment (PJ). The statute includes a
noncomprehensive list of examples of special circumstances, including “recent unemployment of
a family member or an independent student.”42 FAAs are also authorized to adjust dependency
status (i.e., change status from dependent to independent) for students with unusual circumstances
who do not meet any of the statutory independent student criteria.43 Current law does not define
unusual circumstances. ED provides guidance to FAAs on the use of PJ.44
Under current practice, such adjustments are generally provided only to students who proactively
appeal to the school’s FAA, and schools do not have a defined responsibility to notify students
that PJ is available. The FSA amendments require that IHEs publicly disclose that students
applying for aid have the opportunity to pursue adjustments based on their family and financial
circumstances.45
The professional judgement provisions as established by the FSA are among the provisions that
ED has the authority to implement on or after July 1, 2023, but not later than July 1, 2024, per the
FSATCA.46 See the section in this report on
“Effective Date and Extension” for more
information.
Education, FY2023 Budget Justification, Student Aid Administration Section, p. 16, https://www2.ed.gov/about/
overview/budget/budget23/justifications/y-saa.pdf.
41 HEA §483(a)(2)(D)(i), as amended by the FSA.
42 HEA §479A.
43 In the FSA amendments,
special circumstances typically refer to those related to the adjustment of financial factors
while
unusual circumstances refer to the circumstances established in HEA §480(d)(9) as potentially qualifying a
student for an adjustment of dependency status.
44 For example, see the “Special Cases” chapter of ED’s Student Aid Handbook for award year 2022-2023, available at
https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2022-2023-Federal-Student-Aid-Handbook/Special-Cases.pdf.
45 HEA §479A(a)(5), as amended by the FSA.
46 This authority is established in FSATCA Section 102(c)(1)(A)(ii), which authorizes ED to implement FSA Section
702(l). which establishes an amended HEA Section 479A.
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Adjustments to Financial Factors
The FSA amendments establish separate lists of sample circumstances related to PJ adjustments
that may be made related to (1) Pell Grant eligibility and (2) COA or data used to calculate the
SAI. Both the Pell Grant and COA/SAI lists allow for “changes or adjustments in the income,
assets, or size of a family, or a student’s dependency status” to inform PJ.47
The sample circumstances related to adjustments to the COA or SAI factors are somewhat
broader than those related to Pell Grant eligibility. For example, the COA/SAI provisions specify
medical expenses and additional family members enrolled in higher education as potential special
circumstances while the Pell Grant provisions do not include them. Notably, adjustments to COA
and SAI may affect Pell Grant eligibility.
Dependency Overrides
The FSA amendments provide detail on how schools will make PJ determinations for students
with unusual circumstances that prevent the students from providing parental information on the
FAFSA. The FSA amendments define
unusual circumstances as those “in which the student is
unable to contact a parent or where contact with parents poses a risk to such student,” including
circumstances of
human trafficking,
legally granted refugee or asylum status,
parental abandonment or estrangement, or
student or parental incarceration.48
Provisional Independent Student
Until the FSA amendments take effect, a student who does not meet any of the independent
student criteria but is unable to provide parental information must submit an incomplete FAFSA.
The incomplete FAFSA will not be processed, and an EFC will not be calculated. The student
must then contact the financial aid office at his or her institution. Depending on the circumstances
and documentation, the institution may be able to provide a dependency override and change the
student’s dependency status to independent.49
The FSA amendments allow students who may qualify for an adjustment of dependency status
based on unusual circumstances to identify as a
provisional independent student when filing the
FAFSA. This would allow the student’s FAFSA to be fully processed without parental
information. An FAA must then notify the student of the institutional process, requirements, and
timeline for an adjustment of dependency status. The FAA will then make a determination after
all requested documentation has been provided following the PJ process specified in the statute.50
47 HEA §479A(b)(1) and (2), as amended by the FSA.
48 HEA §480(d)(9), as amended by the FSA.
49 For more details on procedures for students who are unable to provide parental information and associated
procedures, see the “Special Cases” chapter of ED’s Student Aid Handbook for award year 2022-2023, available at
https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/2022-2023-Federal-Student-Aid-Handbook/Special-Cases.pdf.
50 HEA §479A(c)(2), as amended by the FSA.
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Professional Judgement During a Disaster, Emergency, or
Economic Downturn
Until the FSA amendments take effect, the HEA statute does not provide different treatment of PJ
during periods of disaster, emergency, or economic downturn. In some cases, ED has provided
guidance related to PJ during such periods. Such guidance has, for example, established specific
treatment for students (or relevant family members) who demonstrated job loss based on receipt
of unemployment benefits.51
Outside of the HEA, some nonregulatory guidance and statutory provisions are intended to
support HEA Title IV aid recipients and their families affected by a disaster or national
emergency. Guidance encourages FAAs to use PJ to reflect more accurately the financial need of
students and families affected by a federally declared disaster area as defined in the Stafford
Act.52 The Higher Education Relief Opportunities for Students Act (HEROES Act; P.L. 107-122,
as amended) provides the Secretary with authority to waive or modify statutory and regulatory
requirements that apply to the HEA Title IV student aid programs in an effort to help affected
individuals in connection with a war or other military action or a national emergency declared by
the President.53 Under the HEROES Act, for example, the Secretary may except FAAs exercising
PJ on a case-by-case basis to adjust COA or the values of items used in calculating EFC from the
requirement of making such adjustments.
The FSA amends the HEA to establish that, during specified periods, FAAs may make certain
adjustments to an applicant’s income from work if the applicant provides documentation of
unemployment benefits.54 The FSA further amends the HEA to specify that ED shall make
adjustments to the model used to select institutions for program reviews to account for any
increase in the use of PJ during the specified periods.55
Pell Grant Provisions
The federal Pell Grant program (HEA Title IV-A-1) is the single largest source of federal grant
aid supporting postsecondary education students.56 Pell Grants are a type of need-based aid that is
awarded on a stair-step scale and intended to be the foundation for all need-based federal student
aid awarded to undergraduates. The FSA amendments modify Pell Grant award rules and Pell
51 For example, see Dear Colleague Letter GEN-09-04, “Use of ‘Professional Judgement’ by Financial Aid
Administrators,” April 2, 2009, archived at https://ifap.ed.gov/dear-colleague-letters/04-02-2009-gen-09-04-subject-
use-professional-judgment-financial-aid.
52 U.S. Department of Education, “Non-Regulatory Guidance on Flexibility and Waivers for Grantees and Program
Participants Impacted by Federally Declared Disasters,” September 2017, at https://www2.ed.gov/policy/gen/guid/
disasters/disaster-guidance.docx.
53 For more information about the HEROES Act, see CRS Report R42881,
Education-Related Regulatory Flexibilities,
Waivers, and Federal Assistance in Response to Disasters and National Emergencies.
54 HEA §479A(f), as amended by the FSA. Specified periods include (1) an event for which the President declared a
major disaster or an emergency under Sections 401 or 501, respectively, of the Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and
Emergency Assistance Act; (2) a national emergency related to COVID-19 declared by the President under Section 201
of the National Emergencies Act; or (3) a period of recession or economic downturn as determined by the Secretary of
Education, in consultation with the Secretary of Labor.
55 Ibid.
56 For more information on the Pell Grant program, see CRS Report R45418,
Federal Pell Grant Program of the
Higher Education Act: Primer.
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Grant provisions related to incarcerated students, year-round (summer) Pell Grants, eligibility
restoration, and the program’s authority.
Modifications to Pell Grant Award Rules
In addition to using an SAI to determine Pell Grant award amounts, the FSA amendments provide
an alternative financial indicator for establishing Pell Grant award amounts—AGI. The FSA
amendments also modify the award rules for less-than-full-time enrollment and the minimum
grant amount.
Scheduled Award Prior to the FSA Amendments Taking Effect
Until the FSA amendments take effect, a student’s scheduled Pell Grant award (i.e., the maximum
Pell Grant aid a full-time, full-academic year student can receive in an academic year) is the least
of
(total maximum Pell Grant - EFC) or (COA - EFC).57
The total maximum Pell Grant is the maximum amount of Pell Grant funds that any student may
receive during a given academic year. In accordance with the Pell Grant award rules, full-time,
full-year students with an EFC of $0 may be eligible for the total maximum Pell Grant ($6,895 in
an academic year within award year [AY] 2022-2023).
Scheduled Award Under the FSA Amendments
The FSA amendments base the amount of the scheduled Pell Grant award on either (1) SAI or (2)
a new alternative procedure by which students qualify for maximum or minimum Pell Grant
awards based on an AGI at or below specified levels.58 Regardless of whether the scheduled
award is based on SAI or AGI, the amount cannot exceed COA and cannot be lower than the
minimum scheduled award (see
Figure 1).
Under the FSA amendments, students with an AGI at or below a specified level, the
maximum
grant AGI threshold, qualify for a scheduled award that is equivalent to the total maximum Pell
Grant. The maximum grant AGI thresholds, calculated as a percentage of the poverty guidelines,
are specified in the FSA amendments (see
Figure 1).59 In addition, students whose families are
not required to file a tax return qualify for a maximum Pell Grant.60 Most individuals (or couples)
are not required to file an individual federal income tax return if their gross income is below
established levels that depend on filing status and age. For students who qualify for the maximum
Pell Grant based on AGI or not needing to file a federal income tax return, the FSA amendments
modify their SAI such that they may be eligible for higher amounts of other HEA Title IV aid.
57 HEA §§401(b)(2)(A) and (b)(3), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
58 For Pell Grant purposes, AGI is the AGI of the parent(s) of a dependent student or the AGI of the independent
student and spouse, if applicable.
59 The poverty guidelines are updated periodically in the
Federal Register by the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services under the authority of Section 673(2) of the Community Services Block Grant Act (42 U.S.C.
§9902(2)) applicable to the student’s family size and applicable to the second tax year preceding the academic year.
There are three separate poverty guidelines: for the 48 contiguous states and the District of Columbia, for Alaska, and
for Hawaii.
60 HEA §401(b)(1)(A)(i), as amended by the FSA.
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The FSA amendments also establish
minimum grant AGI thresholds such that students with an
AGI at or below the specified levels qualify for at least the minimum Pell Grant award. Students
with an AGI above the maximum grant AGI threshold but below the minimum grant AGI
threshold qualify for a scheduled award that is equal to the greater of (1) the minimum Pell Grant
or (2) (total maximum Pell Grant - SAI), capped at the total maximum Pell Grant level.61
Students whose AGI exceeds the minimum grant AGI threshold may still qualify for a grant equal
to (total maximum Pell Grant - SAI), capped at the total maximum Pell Grant level, provided that
their SAI is equal to or less than 90% of the total maximum Pell Grant.62
This combination of rules means that a student does not qualify for a Pell Grant if the student has
both (1) an AGI above the minimum grant threshold and (2) an SAI of more than 90% of the
maximum Pell Grant.
The maximum and minimum AGI grant thresholds are specified in the statute and vary by
dependency status and single parent status.63 (See
Figure 1.) For example, students from families
with single parents, including students who are single parents, may qualify for a maximum Pell
Grant if their AGI in the reference year is less than or equal to 225% of the federal poverty
guidelines ($51,817.50 for a family of three in calendar year 2022).64 Students not from single
parent families (including independent students without dependents) may qualify for a maximum
Pell Grant if their AGI is less than or equal to 175% of the federal poverty guidelines ($40,302.50
for a family of three in 2022).
61 HEA §401(b)(1)(A)-(C), as amended by the FSA. The FSA amendments require that the calculated award be
rounded to the nearest $5.
62 HEA §401(b)(1)(A)-(C), as amended by the FSA.
63 Dependency statuses are discussed in the previous subsection and the definitions for single parents are described in
the next subsection.
64 A single parent is a parent of a dependent student or an independent student who is a parent if such parents were
either a head of household, a surviving spouse, or an eligible individual for the earned income tax credit, as defined in
the Internal Revenue Code. The reference year is the “second tax year preceding the academic year,” see HEA
§401(a)(2)(A), as amended by the FSA. This reference year aligns with the “prior-prior year” tax return information
that is used to complete the FAFSA. See the
“Codification of Income Data from the Second Preceding Year” section.
The source of the poverty guidelines is U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, “Annual Update of the HHS
Poverty Guidelines,” 87
Federal Register 3315-3316, January 21, 2022.
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Figure 1. Pell Grant Thresholds for Award Amounts Under the FAFSA Simplification
Act, by Dependency and Marital Status
(AGI as a percentage of federal poverty guidelines)
Source: HEA §401(b), as amended by the FSA.
Notes: AGI
is adjusted gross income. SAI
is Student Aid Index. Pell Grant award cannot exceed cost of
attendance (COA). Adjusted gross income thresholds, as a percentage of poverty, are established by the FSA
amendments. Upper thresholds are inclusive of the lower category. For example, a dependent student who has a
single parent who has an AGI that is 225% of poverty may qualify for the maximum Pell Grant award.
The FSA amendments establish specified instances in which AGI may be adjusted for purposes of
awarding Pell Grants. In limited circumstances, AGI may be reduced by grant aid, scholarship
aid, and Work Study earnings.65 Also in limited circumstances, AGI may be increased to take into
consideration foreign income.66
Definition of Single Parent for Pell Grant Purposes
The FSA amendments define a
single parent67 as an individual who was (as defined by the
relevant sections of the Internal Revenue Code)
a head of household,68
65 HEA §401(b)(1)(E), as amended by the FSA. Grant aid and scholarships are included in gross income if they are
used to pursue nondegree programs or if they are used for purposes other than tuition and fees while pursuing degree
programs. Work Study earnings are generally included in gross income. The FSA amendments preclude ED from
adding a FAFSA question to collect information on the amount of Work Study earnings. For more information about
Federal Work Study, see CRS Report RL31618,
Campus-Based Student Financial Aid Programs Under the Higher
Education Act.
66 See the
“Professional Judgement for Students with Special or Unusual Circumstances” section, and HEA Sections
401(b)(1)(D) and 479A(b)(1)(B)(v), as amended by the FSA.
67 HEA §401(a)(2)(D), as amended by the FSA.
68 As defined in Section 2(b) of the Internal Revenue Code.
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a surviving spouse,69 or
an eligible individual for purposes of the Earned Income Tax Credit.70
The term
single parent applies only to a parent of a dependent student or an independent student
who is a parent.
Notably, the construction of the single parent definition for the purposes of determining Pell
Grant awards under the AGI provisions is not precisely aligned with the criteria for which parents
must provide information when completing the FAFSA to calculate the SAI. (See the
“Dependent
Students with Divorced or Separated Parents” section.)
Award Calculation for Less Than Full-Time Students
Under current law, scheduled Pell Grant awards are reduced when a student is not full-time.71 The
HEA requires that ED publish a schedule of reductions. ED publishes three less than full-time
enrollment schedules: (1) less than full-time but at least three-quarter-time, (2) less than three-
quarter-time but at least half-time, and (3) less than half-time enrollment. Consequently, students
enrolled less than full-time but at least three-quarter-time (e.g., 9, 10, or 11 credits if full-time is
12 credits) with a similar EFC and COA qualify for the same annual Pell Grant award.
The FSA amendments retain the practice of reducing awards for less than full-time students but
changes the methodology.72 The FSA amendments require that awards be reduced in direct
proportion to the degree to which the student is not enrolled full-time, rounded to the nearest
whole percentage point. ED is still required to publish a schedule of reductions. Assuming full-
time is 12 credits and COA, AGI, and SAI do not limit the award, a student enrolled in 11 credits,
for example, could potentially receive 92% of the total maximum Pell Grant award, whereas a
student enrolled in 10 credits could potentially receive 83% of the total maximum Pell Grant
award.
Expansion of Minimum Federal Pell Grant Award for Less Than Full-Time
Students
Until the FSA amendments take effect, the minimum award is 10% of the total maximum
award.73 For AY2022-2023, the minimum Pell Grant award is $692, or 10% of $6,895.74 Students
with an EFC that is higher than 90% of the total maximum Pell Grant are not eligible because the
minimum Pell Grant is 10% of the total maximum award and the award cannot exceed the total
maximum award less EFC.75 A student must be eligible for the minimum Pell Grant award after
69 As defined in Section 2(a) of the Internal Revenue Code.
70 As established under Section 32 of the Internal Revenue Code.
71 HEA §401(b)(2), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
72 HEA §401(b)(2), as amended by the FSA.
73 HEA §401(b)(4), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
74 U.S. Department of Education, Federal Student Aid,
REVISED 2022-2023 Federal Pell Grant Payment and
Disbursement Schedules, GEN-22-04, March 24, 2022, https://fsapartners.ed.gov/knowledge-center/library/dear-
colleague-letters/2022-03-24/revised-2022-2023-federal-pell-grant-payment-and-disbursement-schedules. The actual
minimum award differs from the calculated result of 10% of the maximum award ($689.50, or 10% of $6,895) because
ED uses midpoints for both the expected family contribution (EFC) and the cost of attendance (COA) in the scheduled
award rule. ED’s Federal Pell Grant Payment and Disbursement Schedules group COA and EFC in approximately $100
increments and calculate the award levels for each increment based on the increment midpoints.
75 HEA §401(b)(4), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
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the scheduled award is reduced for their enrollment rate. This means, for example, in AY2022-
2023 a student who has an EFC of $6,203 (90% of the total maximum award) may receive the
minimum award if enrolled full-time ($6,895 - $6,203 = $692), but becomes ineligible to receive
a Pell Grant if enrolled half-time ($6,895 - $6,203)/2 = $346).
The FSA amendments establish the minimum award as 10% of the total maximum award, before
reducing for a less than full-time enrollment rate.76 This means, for example, that a student who
has an EFC that is 90% of the total maximum award may receive the minimum award if enrolled
full-time and may receive approximately half of the minimum award if enrolled half-time.
Pell Grants for Incarcerated Persons
Until the FSA amendments take effect, students seeking Pell Grants may not be incarcerated in a
federal or state penal institution, and students cannot be subject to an involuntary civil
commitment following incarceration for a sexual offense (as determined under the FBI’s Uniform
Crime Reporting Program).77 Students in local penal institutions and juvenile detention may be
eligible.
The FSA amendments eliminate the above prohibition but require that an individual incarcerated
in a correctional institution be enrolled in a
prison education program to receive a Pell Grant.78
Incarcerated individuals are not, however, required to be enrolled in prison education programs to
receive other forms of HEA Title IV aid. Prison education programs must meet general HEA Title
IV institutional and programmatic eligibility requirements and additional FSA-established
requirements.79 Some key FSA-established requirements of prison education programs are that
proprietary (private, for-profit) IHEs may not offer such programs;
the offering IHE must not have been subject to certain unfavorable actions by
ED, its accrediting agency, or the state within the preceding five years;
the programs must “be operating in the best interest of students” as determined
by the appropriate correctional agency;
the programs must offer credits that may be transferred to at least one IHE in the
state where the correctional facility is located, or, in the case of a federal
correctional facility, in the state in which most of the incarcerated individuals
will reside upon release; and
the programs must not offer education that is designed to lead to licensure or an
occupation if such job or occupation typically involves prohibitions on the
licensure or employment of formerly incarcerated individuals in the state in
which the correctional facility is located, or, in the case of a federal correctional
facility, in the state in which most of the incarcerated individuals will reside upon
release.
76 HEA §401(a)(2)(F), as amended by the FSA.
77 HEA §401(b)(6), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
78 HEA §484(t), as amended by the FSA.
79 For more information on HEA Title IV institutional and programmatic eligibility requirements and additional
requirements, see CRS Report R43159,
Institutional Eligibility for Participation in Title IV Student Financial Aid
Programs.
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Unlike most other provisions in the law, ED must implement these provisions no later than July 1,
2023.80 If the Secretary implements earlier than July 1, 2023, notice must be published in the
Federal Register at least 60 days before implementation that delineates on what date, under what
conditions, and for which award years the Secretary will implement the amendments. ED has
indicated that regulations for the prison education programs “may be in effect on July 1, 2023 (or
before that time if the regulations are implemented early).”81
In addition, ED is required to annually and publicly report on the prison education programs, Pell
Grant recipients and expenditures, and academic and post-release outcomes.
Year-Round (Summer) Pell Grants
Under current law, qualified students may receive up to one-and-a-half scheduled Pell Grants, or
up to 150% of the scheduled award, in each award year. To qualify for the additional funds, a Pell
Grant-eligible student must be enrolled at least half-time in a payment period after receiving most
or all of his or her scheduled award in previous payment periods during the award year.82
The FSA amendments eliminate the requirement that such students be enrolled at least half-time.
Restoration of Pell Grant Eligibility
The HEA currently establishes a maximum cumulative lifetime eligibility cap on Pell Grant aid of
no more than 12 full-time semesters (or the equivalent) of Pell Grant awards or six scheduled
awards.83 Pell Grant lifetime eligibility used (LEU) at a closed school from which the student did
not graduate does not count toward the lifetime cap—the eligibility used is restored.84
The FSA amendments restore Pell Grant eligibility used during the following periods:85
a period of attendance at an IHE at which the student was unable to complete a
course of study due to the closure of the institution;
a period of attendance at an IHE for which the student was falsely certified as
eligible for HEA Title IV aid;
a period for which the student received an HEA Title IV loan86 and such loan is
discharged because the student was unable to complete a program due to the
closure of the institution, because the student’s eligibility to borrow was falsely
certified by the institution or was falsely certified as a result of a crime of identity
80 FSA §702(n)(2).
81 U.S. Department of Education, “Institutional Eligibility, Student Assistance General Provisions, and Federal Pell
Grant Program; Proposed Rule,” 87
Federal Register 45432-45506, July 28, 2022.
82 A payment period is the academic period or period of enrollment established by an institution for which financial aid
is disbursed. Payments for all federal student aid programs except Federal Work Study must be made on a payment
period basis.
83 HEA §401(c)(5). For example, students who consistently enroll part-time in standard terms throughout their
progression to a bachelor’s degree could receive Pell Grant aid for 24 semesters, or 12 years. Students who consistently
enroll full-time in standard terms throughout their progression to a bachelor’s degree could receive Pell Grant aid for 12
semesters, or six years. This change does not affect the measurement of full-time enrollment for the purposes of federal
student aid, which is currently 12 semester hours (or the equivalent for nonstandard terms).
84 HEA §437(c)(3).
85 HEA §401(d)(5), as amended by the FSA.
86 HEA Title IV loans include those made under the Direct Loan program, the Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL)
program, and the Perkins Loan program.
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theft, or because the institution failed to make a refund of loan proceeds owed to
the student’s lender;87
a period for which the student received an HEA Title IV loan and such loan is
discharged under the Secretary’s authority to “compromise, waive, or release any
right, title, claim, lien, or demand,” under HEA Section 432(a)(6);88 or
a period for which the student received an HEA Title IV loan and such loan is
discharged under a borrower defense to repayment claim,89 including defenses
provided to any applicable groups of students.90
The authority to restore Pell Grant eligibility in the above circumstances is among the provisions
that ED has the authority to implement on or after July 1, 2023, but not later than July 1, 2024.
(See the
“Effective Date and Extension” section for more information.)
Changes to Pell Grant Authorizations and Appropriations
Under current law, discretionary appropriations were authorized through FY2017, while
mandatory appropriations are permanently provided.91 The FSA amendments authorize
discretionary appropriations for each of FY2024 through FY2034. The FSA amendments
maintain the permanent mandatory appropriations at the same levels.
Changes to Policies or Procedures for Specific
Populations
A number of FSA provisions change or codify certain procedures or policies for specified
populations of students. In most cases, the policies are designed to ease access to aid by
streamlining or standardizing policies for a specified population.
Procedures for Homeless Students and Foster Youth
Under current law, students who meet specified criteria related to homelessness or foster youth
can qualify as independent students regardless of age and other factors.92
87 Neither the statute nor regulations specify the availability of Perkins Loan discharges because the student’s eligibility
to borrow was falsely certified by the institution or was falsely certified as a result of a crime of identity theft, or
because the institution failed to make a refund of loan proceeds owed to the student’s lender.
88 HEA Section 432(a)(6) seemingly applies to both the FFEL and Direct Loan programs; it does not apply to the
Perkins Loan program. HEA Section 468(1) contains an identical provision for Perkins Loans. It is unclear whether
Pell Grant eligibility could be restored if used during a period for which the recipient received a Perkins Loan that is
discharged under the Secretary’s authority to “compromise, waive, or release any right, title, claim, lien, or demand”
under either of these provisions.
89 In general, Perkins Loans are not eligible to be discharged under a borrower defense to repayment claim. For
additional information, see CRS Report R44737,
The Closure of Institutions of Higher Education: Student Options,
Borrower Relief, and Other Implications.
90 For more information on loan discharge, see the “Loan Discharge for Borrower Hardship” section in CRS Report
R45931,
Federal Student Loans Made Through the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program: Terms and
Conditions for Borrowers.
91 Pell Grants have received annual discretionary appropriations every year despite being unauthorized appropriations.
92 HEA §480(d)(1)(B) and (H).
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The FSA amendments establish policies and codifies procedures through which FAAs are to
verify that a student meets the criteria for these statuses. The changes in procedures for
establishing homeless student and foster youth status are among the provisions that ED has the
authority to implement on or after July 1, 2023, but not later than July 1, 2024.93 (See the
“Effective Date and Extension” section for more information.)
Homeless Students and Students At Risk of Homelessness
Until the FSA amendments take effect, a student may qualify as independent if he or she is
verified during the school year as unaccompanied and homeless or “unaccompanied, self-
supporting youths at risk of being homeless.”94 The statute establishes authorities that can verify
this status, such as administrators of federal programs that serve homeless youth.
The FSA amendments retain the general principle of independent student status for
unaccompanied homeless students and unaccompanied, self-supporting students at risk of
homelessness but provides more detail and flexibility on how this status can be established. The
FSA amendments explicitly align the definitions of
homeless youth and
unaccompanied with the
McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act.95 The FSA amendments establish that if a student is
unable to provide documentation of participation in a specified program, the student may also
establish this status through a written statement or a documented interview with an FAA. The
FSA amendments also permit prior determinations to be used for the same award year or
subsequent award years at the same institution or at a different institution.
Procedures for Foster Care Youth
Until the FSA amendments take effect, a student may qualify as independent if he or she was in
foster care at any time when aged 13 years or older.
The FSA amendments retain this criterion and establish documentation that shall be considered
sufficient for establishing this status. Similar to the policy for homeless students, the FSA
amendments establish that prior determinations from the same school or from another school may
be used in the same or subsequent award years.
Procedures for Veterans of the Armed Forces
Until the FSA amendments take effect, students who meet specified criteria for a
veteran can
qualify as independent students regardless of age and other factors.96 The definition for
veteran is
specific to the HEA; though, under current practice, ED uses data from the Department of
Veterans Affairs (VA) to confirm that an individual is a veteran for HEA Title IV purposes.
Differences in the definitions make the match less effective.
The FSA amendments redefine
veteran to coincide with definitions used by the VA.97
93 This authority is established in FSATCA Section 102(c)(1)(A)(ii), which authorizes ED to implement FSA Section
702(l), which establishes a new HEA Section 479D.
94 U.S. Department of Education,
Federal Student Aid Handbook, p. AVG-97.
95 42 U.S.C. §11434a.
96 HEA §480(c)(1).
97 Specifically, HEA Section 480(c), as amended by the FSA, specifies that “the term ‘veteran’ has the meaning given
the term in section 101(2) of title 38, United States Code, and includes individuals who served in the United States
Armed Forces as described in sections 101(21), 101(22), and 101(23) of title 38, United States Code.”
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Procedures for Children of Deceased Servicemembers and Public
Safety Officers
Until the FSA amendments take effect, a student whose parent or guardian dies under specified
circumstances may be eligible for increased amounts of HEA Title IV aid under two HEA
provisions.
Under one provision, an otherwise Pell Grant-eligible student whose parent or guardian dies
under specified circumstances receives a zero EFC provided the student was under 24 years old
or was enrolled at an IHE at the time of the parent’s or guardian’s death.98 The specified
circumstances occur when the parent or guardian was
a member of the U.S. Armed Forces and died as a result of performing military
service in Iraq or Afghanistan after September 11, 2001; or
actively serving as a public safety officer and died in the line of duty.99
The zero EFC is used to award all HEA Title IV aid. A Pell Grant so awarded to the child of a
public safety officer is referred to as a
Fallen Heroes Scholarship.
Under the other provision, a student who is not eligible for a Pell Grant because their EFC is too
high and who had a parent or guardian die as a result of military service in Iraq or Afghanistan
after September 11, 2001, is eligible for non-need-based grants called Iraq and Afghanistan
Service Grants (IASG). The amount of the IASG is the same as the Pell Grant the student would
be eligible for if they had a zero EFC. IASG payments are adjusted like Pell Grants for students
who are enrolled less than full-time, but unlike Pell Grants, these non-need-based grants do not
count as estimated financial assistance. In addition, IASG is funded solely with mandatory
appropriations that are subject to federal budget sequestration.100
The FSA amendments consolidate the provisions described above into one similar provision that
expands student eligibility and limits the benefit to the Pell Grant program only.101 A student
whose parent or guardian died under specified circumstances may qualify for a Pell Grant
provided the student is under age 33. The specified circumstances occur when the parent or
guardian was
a member of the U.S. Armed Forces and died in the line of duty while serving on
active duty on or after September 11, 2001; or
actively serving as a public safety officer and died in the line of duty.
The parent’s or guardian’s death does not qualify the student for additional amounts of non-Pell
Grant HEA Title IV aid. In other words, the parent’s or guardian’s death has no effect on SAI.
The amount of the Pell Grant is the same as the Pell Grant the student would be eligible for if
they had a zero SAI.
98 HEA §473(b), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
99 A
public safety officer is as defined in 42 U.S.C. §3796b or is an eligible fire police officer. HEA §473(b)(5).
100 For a description of sequestration procedures, see the “Budget Caps and Sequestration” section in CRS Report
R44477,
Department of Education Funding: Key Concepts and FAQ.
101 HEA §401(c), as amended by the FSA.
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Effect of Drug Convictions and Draft Registration on Student
Eligibility
Before the applicable provisions of the FSA amendments took effect, certain drug convictions and
failure for males to register for the draft made individuals ineligible for federal student aid under
HEA Title IV.
Students could be disqualified from HEA Title IV aid for a period of time or indefinitely
for a federal or state conviction for possession or sale of a controlled substance while
receiving HEA Title IV student aid. Periods of ineligibility for federal student aid funds
were based on whether the conviction was for the sale or possession of drugs and whether
the student had previous offenses.102
The Military Selective Service Act specified that any individual who failed to register
with the Selective Service was ineligible for federal student aid under HEA Title IV.103
Men who were required to register and did not do so were ineligible unless they did not
knowingly and willfully fail to register.
The FSA amendments eliminate the above disqualifications. These amendments were among the
specified provisions that ED was authorized to implement before July 1, 2023, in the FSA, as
originally enacted.
On June 17, 2021, ED published notice of an early implementation in the
Federal Register.104 For
the 2021-2022 and 2022-2023 award years,105 the questions about Selective Service Registration
and specified drug offenses will remain on the FAFSA but affirmative answers to these questions
no longer affect students’ HEA Title IV eligibility. Beginning in the 2023-2024 award year, the
questions on Selective Service Registration and applicable drug convictions will be removed from
the FAFSA.
Sharing of Student Information
Under current law, the HEA specifies that student-level information from the FAFSA is shared
with states, IHEs specified by the student, and specified scholarship organizations.106 Other
legislation specifies that students may grant explicit written consent for their IHEs to share
information with scholarship granting organizations or “an organization … designated by the
applicant to assist the applicant in applying for and receiving financial assistance for any
component of the applicant’s cost of attendance.”107
102 HEA §484(r), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
103 50 U.S.C. §3811(f)-(g).
104 U.S. Department of Education, Office of Postsecondary Education, “Early Implementation of the FAFSA
Simplification Act’s Removal of Requirements for Title IV Eligibility Related to Selective Service Registration and
Drug-Related Convictions,” 86
Federal Register 32252-32253, June 17, 2021, at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/
FR-2021-06-17/pdf/2021-12762.pdf.
105 IHEs could have implemented these changes as early as June 17, 2021, but were required to implement them no
later than 60 days thereafter.
106 HEA §483(a)(3)(E), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
107 Section 312 of the Department of Defense and Labor, Health, and Human Services and Education Appropriation
Act, 2019 and Continuing Appropriation Act, 2019 (P.L. 115-245). The provisions in this law further specify that “this
section shall be in effect until Title IV of the HEA is reauthorized.”
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Beyond the required authorizations to allow for data sharing under the FUTURE Act, the FSA
amendments further specify that applicants may provide additional authorization to have certain
information shared with “applicable agencies that handle applications for means-tested Federal
benefit programs.” The information shared with these agencies may include the student’s SAI and
scheduled Pell Grant but shall not include federal tax information shared from the IRS.108
Other Changes to Institution-Level Administration
and Aid Packaging
FAAs at eligible institutions are involved in several aspects of administering HEA Title IV aid
programs. Key roles include reviewing and verifying information submitted by students on the
FAFSA, calculating student aid awards, disbursing awards, adjusting awards to ensure students
do not receive more assistance than they are eligible for, record keeping, and reporting various
information to ED. According to federal student aid need analysis procedures, a student’s EFC,
amount of EFA, and estimated COA are critical components of determining student aid awards.
Verification
Under current practice, institutions must verify information provided on the FAFSA for a portion
of federal aid recipients. Policies and procedures associated with verification are largely
established in regulations and agency guidance.109 Verification mainly consists of students
providing documentation to confirm that information provided on the FAFSA is accurate.110
The FSA amendments establish several new statutory provisions related to verification. It directs
that ED, “to the maximum extent practicable, streamline and simplify the process of verification
for applicants” and requires ED to publish data annually on verification activities.111
Estimated Financial Assistance
Under current law, student need is defined as COA minus the sum of the EFC and EFA.112 The
statute defines EFA as “all scholarships, grants, loans, or other assistance known to the institution
at the time the determination of the student’s need is made,” with specified exceptions.113 EFA
does not affect eligibility for Pell Grants but can reduce eligibility for other forms of need-based
federal aid.
The FSA amendments make a few changes to the forms of assistance that are considered EFA.
The FSA amendments remove the exclusion of special combat pay from EFA. The law
specifically excludes payments made and services provided under Title IV-E of the Social
Security Act to a child or youth in foster care, or formerly in foster care. This includes, for
108 HEA §483(a)(2)(D)(ii), as amended by the FSA.
109 See 34 C.F.R. §§668.51-668.61 for regulations. The regulations specify that they are established under the authority
of HEA Section 487 (20 U.S.C. §1094).
110 The specific details of verification procedures can vary from one year to the next. For information on the 2021-2022
award year, see Chapter 4 of ED’s “Application and Verification Guide” from AY2021-2022 at
https://fsapartners.ed.gov/sites/default/files/attachments/2021-02/2122FSAHbkAVGMaster.pdf.
111 HEA §483(b)(6), as amended by the FSA.
112 HEA §471, as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
113 HEA §480(j).
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example, the value of a Title IV-E foster care maintenance payment, Educational and Training
Vouchers (ETVs), or any other services or assistance provided to the youth under Title IV-E,
including the Chafee Foster Care Independence Program for Successful Transition to
Adulthood.114 The FSA amendments also exclude from EFA emergency financial assistance
provided to the student for unexpected expenses that are a component of the student’s COA but
not considered when the need determination is made.
Cost of Attendance
Under current law, the statute establishes the elements for institutions to use in estimating the
COA that is used in packaging student aid.115 For students attending at least half-time, COA
includes tuition, fees, books, supplies, transportation, miscellaneous costs, and several options for
room and board. COA can also include specified costs relevant to students in certain situations,
including dependent care expenses, study abroad expenses, and expenses associated with a
disability. For less than half-time students, the universe of applicable costs is somewhat narrower.
Separate provisions of the HEA prohibit ED from regulating beyond what is in the statute.116
The FSA amendments provide additional detail on how IHEs will calculate components of COA
for students in various circumstances. These additional details include providing a separate
allowance “for purchasing food … that provides the equivalent of three meals per day” for each
student who does and does not elect “institutionally owned or operated food services.”117 The
FSA amendments also remove the prohibition for regulating on components of COA other than
tuition and fees. It retains the prohibition for regulating on the tuition and fees component of
COA.118
The amended COA provisions are among the provisions that ED has the authority to implement
on or after July 1, 2023, but not later than July 1, 2024.119 (See the
“Effective Date and
Extension” section for more information.)
Other Provisions
The FSA amendments include three provisions that are not related to the direct application for
and provision of HEA Title IV aid. These provisions are intended to expand outreach among
prospective students regarding the availability of HEA Title IV aid and provide relief to certain
institutional and student federal loan borrowers.
114 Children in foster care may be eligible for Title IV-E foster care maintenance payments, and if age 14 or older they
are also eligible for Chafee services, including Educational and Training Vouchers (ETVs). The exclusion of the value
of Title IV-E payments or services applies only to youth formerly in foster care if they are eligible for Chafee services,
including ETVs. Chafee-eligible youth include those who left foster care for adoption or legal guardianship at age 16 or
older, or youth who left foster care for any other reason at age 14 or older. For Chafee-eligible former foster youth, any
Title IV-E adoption assistance or guardianship assistance payment would also be excluded from determination of need.
For additional information, see CRS Report RL34499,
Youth Transitioning from Foster Care: Background and Federal
Programs.
115 HEA §472, as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
116 HEA §478(a), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
117 HEA §472(a)(1)(5)(A)-(B), as amended by the FSA.
118 HEA §478(a)(2), as amended by the FSA.
119 This authority is established in FSATCA Section 102(c)(1)(A)(i), which authorizes ED to implement FSA Section
702(b), which establishes an amended HEA Section 472.
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Early Awareness and Outreach Efforts
Under current law, the HEA directs ED, in cooperation with states, IHEs, secondary schools, and
other partners, to implement outreach programs to communicate the availability of federal student
aid. Outreach efforts can include targeted efforts to recipients of other means-tested benefits and
secondary students as well as broader public awareness campaigns.
The FSA amendments expand existing provisions related to early awareness and outreach efforts.
It directs ED to produce a “consumer-tested method of estimating student eligibility” for Pell
Grants. It specifies that the estimation method shall be prominently available on ED’s website
and shared with specified partners, including HEA Title IV-participating IHEs and all middle and
secondary schools eligible for funds under Title I-A of the Elementary and Secondary Education
Act.120 The FSA amendments further direct ED to establish early awareness outreach plans to
provide information about federal student aid and other informational resources to specified
populations.
Repeal of the Subsidized Usage Limit Applies Requirement
Eligible undergraduate students may borrow Direct Subsidized Loans. These loans have an
interest subsidy that applies during qualifying periods (e.g., while a borrower is enrolled in an
eligible program on at least a half-time basis).121 Until the FSA amendments take effect, a student
who is a
first-time borrower122 may only borrow Direct Subsidized Loans for a period that may
not exceed 150% of the published length of the academic program in which he or she is currently
enrolled.123 This is referred to as the Subsidized Usage Limit Applies (SULA) requirement.124 If a
Direct Subsidized Loan borrower subject to this provision remains enrolled in the same program
for which the loan was obtained (or another undergraduate academic program of equal or shorter
length) beyond the applicable maximum eligibility period, the borrower will become responsible
for paying the interest that accrues on all his or her previously borrowed Direct Subsidized Loans
after the date that the maximum eligibility period is exceeded.
The FSA amendments repeal the SULA requirement. This repeal was among the specified
provisions that ED was authorized to implement prior to July 1, 2023, in the FSA, as originally
enacted.
ED effectuated this repeal through regulations. Specifically, effective August 13, 2021, the SULA
requirements do not apply to any borrower who receives a Direct Subsidized loan first disbursed
on or after July 1, 2021. In addition, for borrowers who have a Direct Subsidized Loan that is
outstanding as of July 1, 2021, and on which the borrower has been responsible for paying
120 Title I-A of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act provides funds to elementary and secondary schools with
relatively high concentrations of students from low-income families. For information, see CRS Report R44461,
Allocation of Funds Under Title I-A of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.
121 For additional information on Direct Subsidized Loans, see CRS Report R45931,
Federal Student Loans Made
Through the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program: Terms and Conditions for Borrowers.
122 A first-time borrower is “an individual who has no outstanding balance of principal or interest on a Direct Loan
Program or [Federal Family Education Loan] Program loan on July 1, 2013, or on the date the borrower obtains a
Direct Loan Program loan after July 1, 2013.” 34 C.F.R. §685.200(f)(1)(i).
123 HEA §455(q), as in effect prior to implementation of the FSA amendments.
124 This is sometimes also referred to as the Direct Subsidized Loan maximum eligibility period.
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interest because they exceeded the maximum eligibility period, ED will “adjust their account to
remove the interest that accrued and reapply the borrower’s payments accordingly.”125
HBCU Capital Financing Loan Repayment
The Historically Black Colleges and Universities Capital Financing Program (HBCU Cap Fin) is
a loan guarantee program that provides federal assistance to HBCUs to obtain low-cost capital
financing for campus maintenance, renovation, and construction projects.126
The FSA amendments direct ED to repay, within 90 days of enactment and on behalf of
participating HBCUs, the outstanding balances on HBCU Cap Fin loan amounts that had been
disbursed as of December 27, 2020.
In April 2021, ED announced the discharge of approximately $1.6 billion of debt for 45
HBCUs.127
Author Information
Benjamin Collins
Cassandria Dortch
Analyst in Labor Policy
Specialist in Education Policy
Disclaimer
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan
shared staff to congressional committees and Members of Congress. It operates solely at the behest of and
under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other
than public understanding of information that has been provided by CRS to Members of Congress in
connection with CRS’s institutional role. CRS Reports, as a work of the United States Government, are not
subject to copyright protection in the United States. Any CRS Report may be reproduced and distributed in
its entirety without permission from CRS. However, as a CRS Report may include copyrighted images or
material from a third party, you may need to obtain the permission of the copyright holder if you wish to
copy or otherwise use copyrighted material.
125 U.S. Department of Education, “Repeal of the William D. Ford Federal Direct Loan Program Subsidized Usage
Limit Restriction,” 86
Federal Register 31432-31438, June 14, 2021.
126 For additional information, see CRS Report R43237,
Programs for Minority-Serving Institutions Under the Higher
Education Act.
127 U.S. Department of Education, “Department of Education Discharges Over $1.6 billion in HBCU Capital Finance
Debt,” April 2, 2021, at https://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/department-education-discharges-over-16-billion-
hbcu-capital-finance-debt.
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