FAFSA Glitches May Keep Students From Getting Crucial Financial Aid Info
Persistent technical difficulties have made completing the financial aid form nearly impossible for many applicants.

The Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) is a vital tool for prospective college students and their parents seeking financial aid. Most colleges use the form when deciding how much aid to offer applicants, and over 17 million students end up filling out the form each year.
However, this year's FAFSA rollout has been plagued by glitches and delays, stemming from the Education Department's attempt to streamline the form. While an updated form was meant to make the application process easier, the department informed colleges that they wouldn't receive crucial FASFA data until sometime in early March—more than a month after the typical January 30 deadline.
As a result, colleges will likely be forced to delay financial aid offers—an outcome that could leave millions of students without the necessary information to decide where to enroll.
The path to an updated FAFSA form began in 2020, when Congress passed the Consolidated Appropriations Act, which required the Education Department to develop a streamlined FAFSA form. The new form cut the number of questions by more than half and uses data directly from the IRS to make the form even simpler.
However, the new form's release was riddled with delays. The FAFSA form is typically released in October each year. But this year's form wasn't available until December 30—and even then, the form was only accessible "periodically." Adding to the issues, families' deadline for submitting the form has stayed the same, meaning that applicants this year have much less time to complete the form.
If they even can complete the form, that is.
The new FAFSA's endemic glitches have been a particular source of frustration for students and their parents. "Things were not always clear," journalist Ron Lieber wrote in The New York Times, detailing his attempt to fill out the form on December 31. "At one point, the site was telling me that both my daughter and I had already started forms when in fact neither of us had, at least as far as I could tell."
Currently, the form is becoming nearly impossible to complete for swaths of students due to technical issues. According to the Federal Student Aid website, issues with the form have prevented students who accidentally checked an "eligible noncitizen" box from filling out the form, even after correcting their mistake, and caused some parents to be unable to fill out the form on behalf of their child. While these issues have workarounds, students whose parents don't have Social Security Numbers can't fill out the form at all.
As a result of these issues, millions of prospective college students might be unable to complete the form at all. For those who can fill it out, the colleges that have accepted them might not be able to offer timely financial aid information that families rely on when deciding where to enroll.
"This problematic rollout is causing more than just an administrative headache. For students—and even schools themselves—the ripple effect could be catastrophic," Justin Draeger and Ted Mitchell, presidents of the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators and the American Council on Education, respectively, wrote on Thursday. "Federal financial aid programs were created to open the doors to higher education, bringing a dream within reach for some who would otherwise be unable to unlock that future. Those who can least afford to pay for college will be the most adversely affected."
Forcing the Education Department to make the FAFSA less complicated is a perfectly good proposal. However, the new form's disastrous rollout shows what can happen when a student's ability to afford college is left in the hands of an unaccountable government agency. Instead of expanding access to college aid, a broken FAFSA form may close the door to millions of eager students.
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FAFSA Glitches May Keep Students From Getting Crucial Financial Aid Info
Persistent technical difficulties have made completing the financial aid form nearly impossible for many applicants.
Trying to see the negatives here.
Can't complain about having to repay loans you were never allowed to get.
Considering there are alternative methods to get money for college I have to agree. Sure, it may keep the people in what passes for poverty in this country out of college but is that such a bad thing? Parents who can't get out of poverty probably haven't raised kids who will be good at doing so even with a degree of some kind.
The idea that a college degree equals success because successful people tend to have college degrees is like saying playing basketball will make you tall because basketball players tend to be tall.
As a result, colleges will likely be forced to delay financial aid offers—an outcome that could leave millions of students without the necessary information to decide where to enroll.
This might be a great opportunity to consider something other than a useless education that you can't afford.
The ?Free? Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) is a vital tool for ... building a [Na]tional So[zi]alist Empire!
Remember that day the people passed the Constitutional Amendment authorizing the federal government to fund/lend for everyone's education?
Yeah; me neither.
F'En Nazi's.
Much as I love/hate stories about government incompetence, there’s much more in this story than the author seems to intend! For example, why do most colleges and universities use the form to determine financial aid? Does the government require them to use it? Where is the financial aid coming from? If they’re required to use a government form, is it because the financial aid is coming from or through a government agency? Why are educational institutions in the business of financial aid in the first place? Is it so they charge outrageously high tuition for attendance at their schools? Aren’t we outraged that the government and higher education are in bed with each other to their mutual profit? Instead, it seems that the author is outraged that students are inconvenienced in their efforts to get subsidized by the taxpayers in their paper chase for degrees that most of them don’t need and won’t be able to pay off.
Wait. So is the government being in the college student loan business good or bad?
So sad, especially with such a clear and specific demand in the constitution for a federal education department.
fuckers can't get left-hand-right-hand correct on who has paid what, either.
Man, this shit wasn't nearly as much of a pain in the ass when we just picked up the forms at the financial aid office, filled them out, turned them back in to the desk clerk, and then waited a few weeks to see how much debt we were eligible to take out.
Nice to see Emma reporting good news with a positive spin for a change.
I worked in Eastern Kentucky for 18 years ministering to the underclass. For many, a bigger issue is trying to track down an absentee father and/or mother to be able to even fill out a form. With one family, we had to trick one of the parents to get their child an ID card, just so they could take the ACT. Parents with warrants don’t want to risk dropping by the courthouse to sign for their children to get an ID. There are lots of teens that are couch hoppers just staying at a home for as long as they let them with no contact with parents. Many have no idea where their parents are. This can be a reality for kids that want to get into college. Unfortunately, most of the children in these situations will never even try to get into college or give up because they have no help navigating the system. Our ministry provided that help, however much more help is needed.
My son has a friend in that boat. Sperm donor is a total piece of shit. "Mother" has two kids by different men and her mother is raising the kids. He was going to college and had no idea how it was being paid. Turns out his mother filled out the FAFSA in 2022 and he's getting an almost free ride from grants because his parents are useless.
My child was recently accepted into college and doesn't "need" financial aid, but the thing that irks me is that many merit-based scholarships that don't require financial need still want us to complete a FAFSA in order to apply. That makes no sense to me. And I have no interest in providing all of my financial information and SSNs to anyone who doesn't need to know it.
Trust me, they know.
You guys are missing the real tragedy here. If the students can't apply for aid, they can't pay tuition and fees that have tripled in the last 50 years, even after inflation is fully accounted for. The college revenue that pays for tens of thousands of useless college graduates to sit around in fancy offices and pretend to "administer" is in danger!