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What is the Base Year for Financial Aid? | College Coach Blog

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Shannon Vasconcelos

Written by Shannon Vasconceloson October 13th, 2015

Shannon Vasconcelos has worked in student financial assistance at Boston University and Tufts University School of Dental Medicine, where she served as the assistant director of financial aid. At Tufts, she was responsible for reviewing financial aid applications, determining financial aid awards, and helping families through the college financing process. In addition, Shannon has served as an active member of the Massachusetts Association of Student Financial Aid Administrator’s Early Awareness and Outreach Committee, as a trainer for the Department of Education’s National Training for Counselors and Mentors, and as a volunteer for FAFSA Day Massachusetts. She has a BA in economics from the University of Massachusetts and an MA in urban and environmental policy and planning from Tufts University.

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If you’ve been keeping up on the latest financial aid news, you’ve probably heard about the federal government’s shift to collecting what is awkwardly referred to as prior-prior year data on the FAFSA. In light of this news, it is appropriate to take one step back and discuss a concept critical to understanding the financial aid application process, and that notion is the base year. Colleges calculate a family’s ability to pay for college each year based, to a large extent, upon their income.  In order to approximate a family’s income for the next academic year (which is unknown at the time of application), the FAFSA asks the family to report a prior year’s income:  this is known as the base year income.  It is the yearly income upon which the financial aid award is based. Currently, the FAFSA asks students to report their family’s income from the prior calendar year. The parent of a high school senior who is beginning college in 2016 would report their prior year’s income; their first base year would thus be 2015. However, this is now changing. Beginning with the 2017-18 academic year, the FAFSA will ask families to report their income from the prior-prior calendar year; data will come from two years ago.  So, if you’re the parent of a high school junior who will start college in 2017, your first base year will, therefore, also be 2015. Keep in mind that you do have to reapply for financial aid for each of the four years your child will be enrolled, so you will end up having four financial aid base years over the course of your child’s enrollment.  Once the move to prior-prior year data is complete beginning in 2017-18, a student’s base years will stretch from January of their sophomore year of high school to December of their sophomore year of college. Why should you care? Since financial aid is calculated based upon base year income, you will want your base year income to look as low as possible.  There are certain financial moves that you may wish to avoid making during a base year, as they will artificially inflate a parent’s or a student’s income. Stay tuned next week when we’ll discuss what these moves are and why you should avoid them.
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