Effective 2024-2025 award year, a contributor on the FAFSA is anyone required to provide consent and approval for obtaining federal tax information needed to complete a student’s FAFSA. If applicable, it may include:
All students and contributors must create a FSA ID (https://studentaid.gov/fsa-id/create-account/launch) to complete the FAFSA® form online. Students and contributors will use their FSA ID account username and password to log in to their accounts.
Even if a parent or spouse contributor does not have a Social Security number, they can still get a FSA ID using their ITIN to fill out their portion of the student’s FAFSA® form online.
The contributor will be invited via email to create a FSA ID and complete their portion of the FAFSA® form by entering their name, date of birth, Social Security number, and email address. The contributor must also provide personal and financial information in their own sections of the FAFSA® form.
Being a contributor does NOT implicate financial responsibility. However, if a required contributor refuses to provide their information, it will result in an incomplete FAFSA® form, and the student will become ineligible for federal student aid.
Starting with the 2024–25 FAFSA®, a separate signature page will no longer exist. There are two alternative options for contributors to provide consent who do not want to or refuse to create a FSA ID:
Most students entering a postsecondary school straight from high school are considered financially dependent on their parents unless they meet one of the following criteria to be considered independent:
Various factors such as changes in family circumstances, traumatic events, or reductions in income may influence your financial aid situation. Under federal guidelines, our financial aid administrators have the flexibility to consider individual situations and, with appropriate documentation, adjust the information provided on the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), adjust the Cost of Attendance, and/or the student’s dependency status on a case-by-case basis. There are a few different categories that financial aid administrators consider when reviewing a student’s circumstance:
a. The following may qualify as a Special Circumstance
i. Loss or reduction of employment, wages, or unemployment compensation
ii. Exceptional medical expenses
iii. Exceptional housing costs above and beyond the school’s Cost of Attendance
iv. Divorce or separation that occurred after the FAFSA was filed
v. Death of a parent or spouse that occurred after the FAFSA was filed
b. The following may qualify as an Unusual Circumstance
i. An abusive family environment
ii. Abandonment and/or estrangement by parents
iii. Parents cannot be located
iv. Cannot provide parental information for the FAFSA if it would cause an unsafe environment
v. Parents are incarcerated
vi. Victim of human trafficking
What is Provisional Independence and what do I need to know about it?