Federal Aid1. Eligibility-Federal Financial Aid
ScholarshipsTimeline9. Deadlines-Financial Aid Application
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Missionaries14. Missionary Income and FAFSA
Miscellaneous15. BYU Title IV School Code |
If you or your family has unusual circumstances (such as loss of employment or major medical expenses) that might effect your need for student financial aid, check with your financial aid counselor. You may also submit a petition with any appropriate documentation.
| For Example: | Amount |
| Cost of Education (for the loan period requested) | $7,000 (fall semester) |
- EFC |
-- 4,000 (4-month EFC) |
- Pell, if eligible |
-- 1,000 (fall's Pell amount) |
- Scholarships |
-- 2,000 |
- Any other financial aid |
-- 1,500 (VA benefit) |
= Need |
= $0 Need |
If your costs of education are being met, as in the example above, you are not eligible for a subsidized Stafford Loan. You would then have only unsubsidized Stafford Loan eligibility.
Satisfactory Academic Progress
Federal regulations require schools to establish, publish, and apply reasonable standards for measuring whether students receiving financial aid are maintaining satisfactory academic progress (SAP) in their courses of study. In keeping with these regulations, Brigham Young University has implemented three separate methods of measuring satisfactory academic progress: one is based on academic grades (Academic Standing); another is based on the rate of progress toward a degree or certificate, determined by examining the percentage of course work completed to graduate in a timely fashion (Rate of Progress) and the third deals with the total number of attempted credit hours (Credit Hour). We have attempted in the paragraphs below to summarize our SAP policy at BYU. The complete document can be viewed by clicking here (it is a .pdf document which requires Adobe Acrobat to be viewed).
Evaluation Measures
Newly admitted students (including entering freshmen or transfer students) are eligible for financial aid during their first semester at BYU. At the end of that enrollment, as are all applicants for financial aid, they will be evaluated to determine if they are making satisfactory academic progress toward a degree or certificate. Evaluation measurements for Academic Standing and for total Credit Hours are taken at the end of each enrollment. Measurement for Rate of Progress is taken just once each academic year, in August. Failure to meet any of the three standards may mean that you become ineligible for financial aid, even though it may have been awarded.
Academic Standing
If you are on academic probation, as defined by BYU, at the end of any enrollment, you will not be eligible for financial aid for the following semester or term. Academic probation normally occurs when a student has two consecutive enrollments below a 2.00 GPA or when a student's cumulative BYU GPA falls below 2.00. Please contact Academic Support, 2502 WSC, Provo , UT 84602-7906 , telephone (801) 422-2723, e-mail : academic_support@byu.edu if you have questions regarding your academic standing. Academic standing is evaluated at the end of each enrollment. Appropriate e-mail notifications are sent out each enrollment to advise you of possible consequences.
Rate of Progress
If you fail to successfully complete 70 percent of the credits for which you register each academic year, you will not be eligible for financial aid for the following academic year. For purposes of this policy the following are counted as nonprogress grades: E, I, IE, NS, UW, W, and WE. Courses that are repeated within the same academic year are also counted as nonprogress courses.
Completion percentages will be evaluated in mid-August at the end of summer term (whether or not you are enrolled). If your rate of progress is less than 70 percent for the regular academic year, you will not be eligible for aid. Rate of progess is evaluated at the end of the academic year, in August. Appropriate e-mail notifications are sent out each enrollment to advise you of possible consequences should your percentage of completion be of concern.
Credit-Hour Policy
If you are an undergraduate student with 150 credit hours or more at the end of winter semester 2004, you must submit a copy of your graduation plan to your academic advisement center. Periodic review of these approved graduation plans may be conducted by the Financial Aid office to assure that you continue to meet the terms of the plan. Explanations for deviations from the graduation plan may be required. This should be submitted by petition to the Financial Aid office.
Undergraduate students who exceed 180 total attempted (including retakes, failed classes UW's, etc.) credit hours are generally ineligible for financial aid. Art education, music education, nursing, engineering and like majors are allowed 150 percent of the credit hours required for the degree. Total credit hours is evaluated at the end of each enrollment. Appropriate e-mail notifications are sent out each enrollment to advise you of possible consequences should your total attempted hours be of concern.
Appeals and Requalifying for Aid
If you are found to be ineligible for financial aid, you may appeal to receive aid when there were unusual, extenuating circumstances that prevented you from making satisfactory academic progress. Possible reasons for an appeal might be an injury or a medical or family emergency. You must initiate the petition to be reinstated for financial aid. You begin the process of petitioning through the Financial aid (VIP) system , under "Messages-Petitions."
If you wish to request an override of the 180 credit-hour limit, you generally must file a copy of your approved graduation plan from your department along with your petition. Other documentations may be suggested or required, depending on the nature of your request (i.e. medical condition, pay stubs, etc.).
Timing can be very important when submitting a petition. In order to be eligible
for the semester or term you are currently enrolled in, you must file the
petition before the enrollment ends. For example, if you were found to be on
Academic probation after summer term (and therefore ineligible for financial
aid fall semester) you would need to file a petition during fall in order to
receive aid for fall. If you waited until January or February, for example, you
could never be paid for that fall semester.
Semester |
Application |
Repayment |
Fall 2006 |
August 1 |
November 15 |
Winter 2007 |
December 1 |
March 15 |
Spring 2007 |
April 1 |
June 1 |
Summer 2007 |
June 1 |
August 1 |
You repay your loan to Student Financial Services, D-155 ASB, Provo , UT 84602 .
If you fail to repay your short-term loan by the due date, collection efforts will begin, and future eligibility will be in jeopardy.
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1. Call 1-800-829-0922 (Monday-Friday 7:00 a.m. - 10:00 p.m. PST )
A. Request a transcript (tax return) by fax: The student must make the request personally (by phone) and will be asked questions to establish positive ID. The student must be standing by the fax machine receiving the fax, will be put on hold while the fax is sent, and will be asked if he or she has received it. This is called a "high-risk disclosure" but is doable.
B. Request a transcript (tax return) by mail: If the originally submitted tax form was incorrect and has been changed, the student will receive a 1722 letter. Both the tax form and the letter are sent without charge and will take seven to ten days to arrive.
2. Write to the IRS using Form 4506 downloaded at www.irs.gov and request a free transcript, which will arrive in about 30 days. (Hint: When you get to Part 8 on the form, choose A).
3. Request an actual copy of your submitted tax form by calling 1-800-829-0922 or by downloading the form from their Web site and mailing it in. It will cost about $39 and will arrive in about 60 days.
Make sure you have signed and dated the tax return you bring to us.
1. FAFSA
- Request a PIN from www.pin.ed.gov.
- Complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).
- List BYU as a school of choice (code 003670).
- Submit by mail or Internet. For speed and accuracy we recommend the Internet.
- If you are an independent student, using the PIN obtained from the Department of Education will eliminate the need to send in a signature page. If you are dependent, both you and your parents can obtain a PIN, also eliminating any need to mail in a signature page.
- If you choose to submit the FAFSA via the Internet, and not use a PIN, don't forget to mail the signature page as soon as possible (within two or three days) or you have to resubmit the FAFSA.
- If you are applying for a PLUS Loan only, you do not need to complete the FAFSA.
2. Financial Aid VIP (Virtual Immediate Processing)
- Click Apply
- Indicate the appropriate year and financial aid program(s) for which you would like to be considered.
3. Student Aid Report (SAR)
- From three to four weeks after mailing the FAFSA , or two to three weeks after submitting FAFSA via the Internet, the federal processor will mail you a Student Aid Report (SAR) and send an electronic copy to us.
- Look over the SAR to make sure the information is correct. If it is, do nothing. If it is not, correct it, sign it, and mail it to us-not the federal processor.
- Sometimes the federal processor will reject a FAFSA, usually because of insufficient information. Again, if it is not, correct it, sign it, and mail it to us-not the federal processor. We will order the changes electronically, which will save time.
- Whether your FAFSA is processed and complete or it has been rejected, you will hear from us within two weeks of our receiving the electronic SAR.
4. Verification
- Once we have a valid SAR, we might ask you to verify the information. Accuracy is an important part of the financial aid process and we are sometimes required to verify the information you provided on the FAFSA.
- Within VIP click What to Do Next.
- We will post "paragraphs" of information to read and "sections" of data for you to complete.
- After you submit your data, we will print and mail you a summary to sign.
- As a result of verification, one of two things should happen:
- Your processing is completed and we make an award. The award amounts and disbursement information are posted in VIP under Awards. Or,
- We order corrections to your SAR because of discrepancies found during verification. These would be discrepancies between the original FAFSA you filed and the verification information you have provided to us. Corrections to the SAR generally take an additional three to five business days. When the correction process is completed, we post it under Awards.
5. Financial Aid Award Information
- Pell Grant: The amount of your annual award will be posted under Awards, along with the Pell Payment Information Sheet. Review this sheet carefully because it provides important information about your Pell award.
- Stafford Loan: If you are using a Utah lender, the guarantee agency (UHEAA) will mail you a Master Stafford Loan Promissory Note. Complete, sign, and return the promissory note to UHEAA. If however, you are using an out-of-state lender, we will mail you a Certification Statement which you then mail to your lender. In return, your lender will mail you the Master Stafford Loan Promissory Note. Complete and return it to your lender.
- Be sure to read the Stafford Loan Information Sheet contained in the promissory note packet so you understand how you receive your loan proceeds. Once an award has been made, this information is also available on VIP under Awards.
- PLUS Loan: The same information regarding the Stafford Loan applies to the PLUS Loan, except that your parent will need to complete the parent borrower section on the promissory note.
6. Disbursement of Funds
- Pell Grant monies will be deposited into your BYU student account a semester at a time and will go toward your tuition payment. If you have excess money, you will receive that in a check as explained on the Pell Payment Information Sheet.
- Stafford Loan proceeds will be deposited into your BYU student account and will go toward your tuition payment. You will receive any excess money in a check as explained on the Stafford Loan Information Sheet. If however, a problem has prevented your Stafford monies from being deposited into your account (i.e., you haven't attended entrance counseling, you have insufficient hours or an overaward, etc.), you have three days to resolve the situation before BYU is required to return the monies to your lender. The three-day time frame can generally be extended, however, if you contact Student Financial Services, (801) 422-4104 or D-155 ASB, within those three days.
- PLUS Loan funds will be mailed by BYU Financial Services to the parent borrower.
| BYU Financial Aid and Scholarship Office • A-41 ASB • Provo, UT 84602 •Phone : (801)422-4104 •Fax : (801)422-0234 • |