Wait, This Year's FAFSA Actually Works?
After a year of glitchy chaos, the Department of Education may have finally gotten its act together.

The 2025–2026 Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) is now available. And unlike last year's form—which had a disastrous launch—this one seems to be working.
The form was officially released on November 21, although a statement from the Department of Education says that thousands of students had already completed applications during periods of beta testing.
"The 2025–26 FAFSA form that we officially released today is the same form that has been live for the past 7 weeks for the more than 140,000 students who successfully submitted applications," FAFSA Executive Advisor Jeremy Singer said in a press release last month. "Our comprehensive beta testing with community-based organizations, high schools and school districts, colleges and universities, software vendors, and state agencies across the country follows industry best practices and has given us the confidence that our systems are ready."
Last year, the Education Department released an updated, streamlined version of the FAFSA. The application is required for students who want federal loans and grants, and most colleges also use the form to determine how much institutional financial aid to give students. Each year, millions of college students and their families fill out the FAFSA.
While creating a simpler version of the form seems like a good idea, the Education Department's form—released almost three months late, on December 30 of last year—was riddled with technical bugs that made it almost impossible for many students to complete. The issues lasted months, making last year's FAFSA a government website–related disaster on par with the launch of HealthCare.gov in 2013.
Last year's form had dozens of persistent issues that took months to resolve. The Education Department even announced in March that it had miscalculated aid estimates for around 200,000 students who reported their own assets on the FAFSA.
By the form's deadline in June, total FAFSA completions were down 11 percent compared to the year prior—a gap larger than the one caused by the coronavirus pandemic. College administrators reported frustration, unable to give students reliable estimates of how much financial aid they could receive without FAFSA numbers.
This year's form was released much sooner than last year's and seems to be functioning properly.
"I got through my part of the form in under 20 minutes," New York Times reporter Rob Lieber wrote last month. "Importing tax information from the Internal Revenue Service was so fast that I was sure I had done it wrong. My daughter did her part in about 10 minutes. She received our results, the so-called Student Aid Index figure, right afterward."
The streamlined form is a welcome change—but it shouldn't have taken a year of chaos to get here.
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If ANY money is going out…FAFSA is not working properly.
^BINGO +10000000000…
All hail the [Na]tional So[zi]alist sytem is now working…. /s
Maybe ‘armed-theft’ wasn’t suppose to be easy/’working’ in the first place.
Libertarian moment?
Any college which accepts a federal subsidized loan must back stop 50% of it. Tuition would decrease by leaps and bounds, useless depts like Gender Studies and the entire Diversity admin would be gone.
And it Federal loans should only be used for technical majors like engineering, hard science, comp sci or business. Social “Science” and liberal art majors are on their own.
You’re trying to micromanage a bullshit program into working better. That’s what’s wrong with Reason. Stop doing that. Start getting back to basics. The problem with government student loans is that first word, “government”. Fuck that 50% crap. Government does not need to loan anybody anything. Markets can handle that just fine.
A committed leftist like Little Emma doesn’t believe that.
Get over your righteous dumbass self. Maximalists like you are one reason libertarianism makes so little progress. Ever heard of not letting the perfect be the enemy of the good? There are a whole shitload of government programs we’re not getting rid of overnight, maybe ever. Making them a little less repressive and wasteful accomplishes more than whining about purity.
^THIS +10000000000.
The very definition of a viable education/skill is that it doesn’t require criminal-learning of how to ‘armed-theft’ for funding.
Most of today’s incompetence and government dependency revolves around criminal-learning that ‘armed-theft’ is a livelihood.
Like it or not. Human self-motivation and survival has to be accounted for else you end up with Gov-Gun packing gangs in an impoverished blood-bath fighting for the last twinkie.
Which is exactly where the [Na]tional So[zi]alist[s] have led this nation too in complete contrast to the founding of the USA (US Constitution); just as Argentina is at. Just as Venezuala did. Just as the USSR did. Just as the German Nazi’s did.
The list goes on and on and on and on and stupid people just keep believing ‘Guns’ can make sh*t for them without a blood-bath in the end.
Well, in a democrat administration, all the form really needs is a line to say how much money you want, and a line to say what bank account to put it in.
Please select from the following options:
Tip 5% for The Big Guy.
Tip 10% for The Big Guy.
Tip 20% for The Big Guy.
Nice joke. We know the 10% is the default.
Bob Menendez chose the 5% option……
Hey, it’s good enough for God.
X — Check here if you want Fatass Donnie’s $1400 per person Covid handout.
X — Check here if you want some of that sweet PPP loan money that you never have to pay back. $700 billion to give away!
I know you are an idiot, Longforfreemoney, but you get worse every month.
I find it ‘idiotic’ entertainment that you can ignore the Democrat who proposed the Cares Act, the Democrats that voted for the Cares Act, the Democrats who pushed for more in the Cares Act. The Democrat who double-dipped on the Cares Act (ARP), the Democrats who pushed more in the ARP bill, the Democrats that voted for the double-dip. Ignore the Republicans who voted against it.
And just take that whole load of Democrat pitching, backing and passing and just blame it all on Trump for his ‘signature’.
TDS is alive and well …….. still.
I don’t. Democrats suck too.
I place the blame this way:
2/3 Republicans (Trump and the GOP Senate).
1/3 Democrats (House)
Yet you’re always on their side, and are a Soros worshipper. And Soros has given BILLIONS tot he democrats and installs democrat operatives in local, state, and federal office around the country.
You are a democrat. Case closed.
Oh, my dog, it must be tiring not being able to go to sleep at night without checking at least three times to make sure George Soros isn’t hiding under your bed. (Granted I could say exactly the same about leftards if I just substituted “a Koch brother” for “Soros”.)
Now add the ARP bill you entirely ignored….. ..because you shill for Democrats.
You are so fucking repetitive. And stupid.
Sounds like just the threat of DOGE has already made government give-aways more efficient.
The threat of DOGE played no role. It was all the negative attention from their screw up. The uproar was bad enough that it was threatening the pensions of people in government who prefer to serve their years and stay under the radar.
The DOGEies have no authority to do anything except make recommendations. When the do, Congress is going to smile, pat them on the head, and then ignore them. The only good news is that so far they’re not wasting anyone’s money except their own.
Rejoice, libertarians! It’s now much easier to get access to other people’s money!
… now that the most prestigious administrators have proven to be outright frauds, student loans and endowments have shown the whole endeavor to be a nearly-unmitigated Ponzi Scheme, and admissions has, sorta, switched back to actual metrics of intelligence from their “Write #BlackLivesMatter 100 times.” admissions process in order to try and scrape back the least bit of credibility… now it’s easier than ever to get other people’s money to pay for it.
Christmas for Emma!
>>the Department of Education may have finally gotten its act together.
no no, I brushed my teeth I promise! see, the brush is wet …
Glad they did so in time to be shut the fuck down.
And tie the student loan program to repayments. The payment of the loans funds new student loans.
Not gonna happen any more than it did in any previous GOP administration. Nice to dream, though.
Hopefully just in time for them to be disbanded.
Dream on. Myself, I’ll believe it when I see it.
The form works.
More “libertarianism” from Reason, celebrating expedience in handouts from our government. WTF.
Get real. There are plenty of government programs that probably deserve the chopping block but aren’t likely to see it soon, if ever. In the meantime, even slightly less dysfunction is a small win.
DOGE ain’t even in place yet, and it’s already working.
The DOGEies are a sick joke. They certainly had nothing to do with this, since the improvements had to have been under way long before they were ever mentioned.
THe operatin was a success but the patient died.
FAFSA was and is a disaster. This didn’t happen in a vacuum.
“Four-year institutions were hardest hit, with public colleges seeing an 8.5 percent drop in first-year enrollments and private nonprofit colleges reporting a 6.5 percent decline. ”
Biden was talking all over the country about how he saved education. but he made the ‘demographic cliff’ WORSE.
This is the fifth? sixth? seventh? article Ms. Camp has written on the Department of Education’s failed roll out in the past 12-15 months. It would be nice if in one of them she can explain which Clause in Article I Section 8 gives the Government of The United States power of education or its funding, because I sure can’t find it
I’m hardly the biggest fan, but if we’re stuck with it (and we very much are) making it even slightly less dysfunctional counts as a minor victory.
>it shouldn’t have taken a year of chaos to get here
OK, let’s get a bunch of libbertarians together and have them design and implement an online form. You’re all so very techie-techie, right?
Honestly I’m pleasantly surprised it only took them a year to un-FUBAR it. Getting the government out of the student loan business altogether might be the ideal, but until that happens making the system even a little less dysfunctional is a win. Let’s face it, if they hadn’t the voices calling for abolishing the program would be drowned out by those calling for throwing even more money at it.