10 Tips for completing the FAFSA

Ian Kloc • November 11, 2024

It is that time of year when our senior students begin applying for college. While this is an exciting milestone for many families as the student plans for his or her next chapter of life, it is also a process that can be quite intimidating for families. Upon the many moving components to the college application and planning process, the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) is one that many families find rather intimidating and confusing. Moreover, completing this incorrectly can cause your family to receive much less need based aid due to a simple mistake. 


In a normal year, the FAFSA would already be open for families beginning October 1st. The family would complete it for the first time when their student is a senior. However, beginning last year the U.S. Department of Education recreated the FAFSA website and calculations. There were many delays and miscalculations as a result of attempting to do too much with too little time. These delays have unfortunately lagged into this year, making the FAFSA unavailable for most families until December 1st of 2024. With this in mind, we want to provide you with some tips that will help this process go smoothly. 


Tip #1: There is no amount of income or assets that disqualifies a family from receiving need based aid.  The most common mistake families make is assuming they make too much and will not qualify for any aid. We highly recommend every family complete this, regardless of income. The worst news a family can get as a result is that they do not qualify. 


Tip #2: The FAFSA is not a one time application.  

The student and parent will be required to file the FAFSA every year that the student plans on returning to school the following academic year. 


Tip #3: Complete this application together.  

The way we recommend to complete this is by having the student and parent sit down at the table together. The parent can help the student complete their portion first and upon the student’s submission, the parent can then begin theirs. This will ensure the application is done right the first time. 


Tip #4: For any dependent student, they should apply by having the student do their part and then the student will invite the parent to complete their portion.  

Although there is an option where the parent does the whole application themselves, we do not recommend this route. Failure of the student to take initiative is a way of telling the FAFSA that you do not want need based aid money. 


Tip #5: Understand which parent(s) have to complete the FAFSA.  

For married parents, usually only one parent will have to complete the FAFSA. For divorced parents, the parent with primary custody will usually be the only one who has to complete it (unless the parents still live together). For parents who share equal custody, it gets a bit more complicated. The FAFSA rules from the DOE go into details of your particular situation in this case. 


Tip #6: Understand your base year.  

One of the most important parts of the FAFSA calculation is income. The parent and student income will both be reported from the base year. This year is January of the student’s sophomore year to December of their Junior year. In other words, the full calendar year before they become a senior. 


Tip #7: Understand what assets have to be included in your FAFSA.  

Another common mistake many families make is including assets in their FAFSA that they do not have to include. A few significant assets that are excluded from the FAFSA include the equity in your primary home, retirement accounts (IRA’s, 401k’s, 403b’s, etc.), cash value life insurance, and annuities. 


Tip #8: Be weary of student asset levels.  

It may seem like suggesting to minimize the student’s assets is a bit counterproductive. However, the reasoning is to help with the amount of aid your family could qualify for. The parent will get an amount of their assets that is excluded from their aid calculation based on the parent age and number of household members. However, the student gets no asset exclusion allowance. This means that every penny in the student’s name will count against them on the FAFSA. 


Tip #9: Get your FAFSA submitted as early as possible. 

The buckets of money that fund need based aid for students are not bottomless. Once the money to fund aid is distributed, it is gone. Therefore, it is wise to get your FAFSA submitted as early as possible to ensure that your application is at the top of the pile.


Tip #10: Ensure all details are accurate before submission. 

This final tip seems obvious. However, every year, a few families will fly through this and submit an application with incorrect information. It is a lot easier to spend the extra time on the review section and ensure the application is correct prior to submission. An error on the application will cause you to have to revoke the application and resubmit and put your student’s FAFSA at the bottom of the pile. Therefore, ensure it is done right the first time. 


While there are many components to the FAFSA, we hope this will provide some good starting tips to begin this application. A+ College Planning and Boyce & Associates are more than happy to be a resource if you would like to learn more about how to apply these to your particular situation. 

Boyce & Associates Wealth Consulting logo and text
By Eric Boyce February 9, 2026
This week, CEO Eric Boyce, CFA discusses: 1. Risks to inflation from weak dollar, rising industrial prices and wages 2. ISM Services index remains positive, labor weak (job openings) 3. Strong response in energy prices, stocks - rhetoric on geopolitical developments 4. concentration of wealth and the pending wealth transfer 5. increased stock market breadth; tech stocks in correction; net profit margin and earnings per share growth remains strong across the S&P 500 equal weight index 6. international stock diversification benefit remains even if US earnings growth has far outpaced global earnings ex-US 7. yield curve as steep as its been in more than 2 years 8. lots of dry powder at private market funds ready to deploy 9. Bitcoin/crypto showing its volatile head 10. As a percent of the total economy, capital spending by the AI hyperscalers likely to exceed the US interstate highway system in the 1950-60's and the railroad build out before the civil war
Logo for Boyce & Associates Wealth Consulting with
By Eric Boyce February 2, 2026
This week, CEO Eric Boyce, CFA discusses: 1. Economic growth estimates for the 4th quarter lower, but numbers still expected to be good. 2. Leading indicators, port container volume down; factory orders slightly higher; retail sales slight uptick 3. comments on housing supply, significant shifts in the rental market, prices likely to continue to show slower growth 4. productivity higher likely due to AI; still risks of inflation, though, due to prices paid by producers 5. dollar remains weak, metals sell-off Friday in part due to new Fed chair nominee; money market inflows still robust despite interest rate decreases 6. quarterly earnings surprises lower; description of what to expect when earnings and economic growth are both positive 7. credit issuance going to be high, followed by refinancing of 1/3rd of all Treasury paper outstanding this coming year.
Family figures under a red umbrella, with text:
By Kelly Griggs February 1, 2026
Naming beneficiaries helps assets bypass probate, speeds payouts, reduces family conflict, and can override your will. Review designations regularly and list primary and contingent beneficiaries to protect your legacy.
Logo for Boyce & Associates Wealth Consulting. Text:
By Eric Boyce February 1, 2026
Growth stays resilient as labor cools and core inflation hovers near ~2.8%. Fed likely pauses after 2025 cuts while leadership broadens beyond megacap tech; watch tariffs, geopolitics, and an “AI bubble” reset.
Logo for Boyce & Associates Wealth Consulting. Text reads
By Eric Boyce January 26, 2026
This week, CEO Eric Boyce, CFA discusses: 1. Decision dilemma with FOMC rate meeting coming up - sticky inflation offset by weaker labor market 2. discussion of inflation components and influences 3. discussion of wages and income 4. residential housing, rental market, home improvement spending 5. exports, gold market and gold versus treasury holdings at foreign central banks 6. institutional and individual sentiment remains strong for risk assets 7. important market rotation underway - favoring value, equal weight, small cap and lower quality 8. balance of earnings growth shifting away from the Mag 7
Family on a couch; text
By Boyce & Associates January 23, 2026
Learn how you can take charge of your family finances, manage your budget, and build resilience for uncertain economic times.
Logo for Boyce & Associates Wealth Consulting. Text reads
By Eric Boyce January 20, 2026
This week, CEO Eric Boyce, CFA discusses: 1. inflation trends heading into 2026 are favorable, pending risks from policy shocks or politicized Fed. Money supply growth also bears watching 2. Producer prices remain elevated; potential supply chain issues on the margin 3. recession probability falling, strong 4th quarter economic growth expected. First half 2026 visibility much better than the end of 2026 visibility 4. retail sales, NY/Philly Fed survey's positive; capital spending trending higher 5. labor market slowing; increased joblessness amongst younger worker and those with degrees 6. update on residential housing; oil production 7. Investor sentiment remains high, volatility low in both equity and fixed income; increased breadth in the equity markets - all sectors above moving averages 8. Lower 2 year rates steepening the yield curve; meanwhile, credit spreads remain very low - implying low risk of recession
Boyce & Associates Wealth Consulting logo and
By Eric Boyce January 12, 2026
This week, CEO Eric Boyce, CFA discusses: 1. no significant predictive investment trends from geopolitical events, especially over the medium to long erm. 2. bank lending recovering, defaults higher but not yet a problem; new business applications on the rise 3. Housing - confidence and affordability still main drivers; average monthly payments and mortgage interest rates remain sticky 4. Job market remains sluggish; job sentiment weak 5. manufacturing remains weak; service economy remains in expansion 6. Big divergence still exists for hard versus soft data; soft data is weak, while much of the observable data is more positive. 7. Atlanta Fed predicting 5% annualized GDP growth for the 4th quarter of 2025 8. Equity market concentrations and valuation bear watching; fixed income poised for better performance
Glass jar with coins and a plant on wooden background with text
By Boyce & Associates January 9, 2026
Considering alternative assets? Learn the key questions to ask, risks to understand, and how alternatives fit into a long-term investment strategy.
Logo for Boyce & Associates Wealth Consulting with
By Eric Boyce January 5, 2026
This week, CEO Eric Boyce, CFA discusses: 1. breakdown of drivers behind the 3rd quarter economic growth data and what to possibly expect in 2026, including possible impact from lingering tariffs and the OBBBA 2. inflation and wage trends heading into the new year. 3. the impact of income levels on spending, consumer confidence and expectations, as well as impact of tariffs and OBBBA on consumers by income level. 4. home prices up, but rate of growth decelerating; median home price to income ratios increasing. 5. Manufacturing activity remains sluggish in the Dallas and Richmond Fed districts, but future order growth looks promising. 6. Net federal interest rate expense will become a significant conversation during the 2030's. 7. breakdown of 2025 equity market drivers, including by sector and by factor. What to expect at least for the first part of 2026. 8. discussion of concentration risk, valuation and volatility heading into the new year. 9. more normal treasury yield curve at beginning of year; discussion of potential for rate cuts. 10.breakdown of commodity performance in 2025 and implications for potential commodity supercycle based on potential weaker dollar expectations 11.state of alternative assets in portfolios, weak crypto markets at end of year, implications of declining Chinese fertility.
Show More