Step-by-Step Financial Aid Guide for International Students (2024)

TABLE OF CONTENTS

  • What makes this financial aid guide amazing?
  • What costs do I consider before I even start college?
  • Cost of applying to college
    • College application fees
    • Financial aid application fees
    • Standardized testing and reporting
    • Courier/Postal services
    • Document Notarization/Apostille/Legalization/Translation
    • Enrollment deposits/Application processing fee
    • Visa Applications
  • Cost of Attending (COA)
  • Creating a budget
  • Understanding Estimated Family Contribution (EFC)
  • College match/fit and list building
    • Common Data set and how to use it
  • Non-traditional or alternative pathways
  • What are the types of financial documents required?
  • CSS profile
    • Students demographic information
    • Parent information
    • Student academic status
    • Income and assets of parents and students
    • Household information
    • Parent expense details
    • Supplemental questions
    • CSS profile for parent use
    • CSS profile dashboard
    • CSS profile and IDOC
    • Forms and status of submitted documents
  • International Student Financial Aid Form (ISFAA)
    • Student information
    • Parent information
    • Financial information
    • Asset information
    • Expenses
    • Expected support/offer
    • Special circ*mstances
  • Changes to your financial aid application
  • What to do once you're accepted
  • A brief guide to analyzing your financial aid award letters
  • How to appeal your financial aid offer
  • How do I show gratitude for those who made a difference in my college journey?
  • What Does that Word Mean? (A Glossary)

What Makes This Financial Aid Guide Amazing?

What Does the Cost Breakdown Look Like?

Cost of Applying to College

There are a variety of costs to consider even before making your college list. Understanding these costs will help you budget and plan, smartly. Your first step in your college journey? Knowing how to dissect/determine fees in order to create a balanced and viable college list.

College Application Fees

Financial Aid Application Fees

Standardized Testing and Reporting Fees

Courier/Postal Services

Document Notarization/Apostille/Legalization/Translation

Enrollment Deposits/College Application Processing Fee

Visa Applications

Calculating the Cost of Attending University (COA)

Visa (I-20 and other visa fees) ---- indirect cost (you pay for it)
Tuition (classes) ---- direct cost (you pay the university for it)
Room and Board (living and meal plans) ---- direct cost
Health Insurance (mandatory) ---- indirect
Additional Fees (varies) ---- indirect
Personal Expenses (airfare, books, miscellaneous) ---- indirect

Creating a College Application Budget

Category of Expense Potential Costs Potential Savings Goal SAVINGS GOAL
HIGH PRIORITY
Enrollment Deposits
*Enrollment deposits are sometimes waived by universities for students with demonstrated financial need.
Varies
USA/CANADA

Enrollment Deposit $300 USD
Housing Deposit $100 USD

UK
Enrollment Deposit £1000

ASIA
Up to $8000 USD. The most expensive deposit payments will include the first-semester tuition payment.

$3,000 USD
Visa Fees
*U.S. ONLY: The SEVIS fee may be paid by the university for students with demonstrated financial need.
USA
SEVIS Fee $350 USD
Visa Appointment Fee $160 USD
Reciprocity Fees (varies by country)

UK
Visa fee (applying outside of UK) £322

$800 USD
Legalization of documents Varies
Do research to determine if this cost applies to you! Remember that there may be separate fees for getting documents and having them notarized. Also consider the cost of postal or courier services.
Variable
Health Checks and Vaccinations Varies
Do research to determine which vaccinations you might need!
★ Some university health insurance plans will cover vaccinations once you arrive in the U.S. Ask the university rep for details!
Up to
$1,000 USD
Travel to UniversityThese expenses will cover transportation from the door of your house to the airport, the flight, and transportation to your university/housing. Varies
Up to
$4,000 USD
SECOND PRIORITY
Getting Started Expenses
Financial aid often includes funding for personal expenses and books, but this may not cover other major expenses, such as a computer, phone, or winter clothes.
Varies
What sort of items do you think you’ll need to start school?
Varies
Personal Expenses
To cover expenses until your first paycheck from work-study is available
Varies
Up to
$1,000 USD
Sub-Total
Emergency Fund (10%)
TOTAL SAVINGS GOAL

My Responsibility: The Search for Fit

How to Use the Common Data Set for Understanding College Fit

Non-Traditional or Alternative Pathways to College

What Documents and Forms Should I Prepare to Find and Fill Out If Required?

How to use the CSS Profile

Student Demographic Information

Parent Information

Student Academic Status

Income and Assets of Parents and Students


Household Information

Parent Expense Details

Expenses are factored in when calculating a student’s EFC. In the CSS Profile, you will be prompted by questions to help determine your EFC. The profile also takes into consideration economic principles, such as cost of living, savings allowances, and tax allowances, in its calculations.

Supplemental Questions

Use this section, if you have a situation that is not clearly expressed through the financial-aid application—i.e., if a parent or guardian has a change in their employment or high medical expenses—this is the section to explain the circ*mstances.

CSS Profile for Parent Use

Almost Complete: CSS Profile Dashboard

CSS Profile and IDOC

How to Use the International Student Financial Aid Form (ISFAA)

Student Information

Parent/Legal Guardian Information

Financial Information

Asset Information

Expenses

Expected Support/Offer

Special Circ*mstances

Changes to your Financial Aid Application

You’re in—now what? How do you choose your best “financial” fit?

A Brief Guide to Analyzing Your Financial Aid Award Letters

STILL NEED SOME MORE MONEY? HOW TO THOUGHTFULLY APPEAL A FINANCIAL AID OFFER

Gratitude and Grace

Glossary of Terms

Agent: A company (agency) or individual (agent) contracted and paid by high schools and universities in other countries to advise and recruit students to their institutions.


Apostille: A legalized document. The Apostille Treaty is an international treaty drafted by the Hague Conference on Private International Law and signed on October 5, 1961. The Hague is a city in the Netherlands and is the location of the International Court of Justice. This treaty defines the ways through which a document issued in one of the countries that signed the treaty or convention can be certified for legal purposes in all the other countries that signed the treaty. In many countries, the document’s notarization is the legal evidence of its authenticity. For the signatories of the Hague Convention, certification by the country’s approved state or national office authenticates the notarized documents. Notarized official transcripts and/or notarized diplomas are often required by other countries to verify the degree’s authenticity.


Billable (Direct) Costs: This is basically an expense that an institution has incurred on the student’s behalf for performing work, offering services, or providing supplies. This is the bill the student or family will receive from an institution.


Colleges: These are often categorized as smaller institutions that emphasize undergraduate education in a broad range of academic areas, such as a liberal arts college.


Cost of Attendance (COA): This is an estimate of your educational expenses for a given period of enrollment. The COA is the cornerstone of establishing your financial need, and it sets a limit on the total aid you may receive. It consists of both direct costs, or those paid directly to the institution, and indirect costs, or those that are incidental to your attendance. Your Cost of Attendance should not be confused with your Student Account Statement (bill)*.


Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs: This bureau of the U.S. Department of State works to inform both U.S. students wishing to study abroad and international students wishing to go abroad for cultural, educational, or professional exchanges.


Certificate of Finances: This form, issued by College Board, helps colleges and universities obtain accurate financial-related information about international applicants seeking to study in the United States. Because financial verification is required before a Certificate of Eligibility (Form I-20) can be offered to an international student, this form facilitates that end goal.


College Scholarship Service (CSS) Profile: This online service provided by College Board allows students, including international students, to apply for financial aid. College Board member schools have access to the information once submitted, and students must pay a small fee to create a CSS Profile. More detailed than FAFSA and available earlier, the CSS Profile is a good option for Early Action and Early Decision applicants, as it gives the schools they are applying to a better idea of their financial aid needs early on.


Community colleges: Also known as junior college, technical or city colleges, these schools are typically two-year public institutions offering certificates, diplomas, and associate’s degrees. Once completing an associate’s degree, a student can transfer to a 4-year institution for a bachelor’s degree.


Cooperative education: A “co-op” combines classroom-based education with practical work experience, providing academic credit for structured job experience. Co-ops are focused on training students for a career in their chosen major (e.g., IT, engineering, etc.). Universities often partner with employers in various industries for internships, which are likely paying jobs (i.e., University of Toronto in Canada and University of Cincinnati).


Curricular Practical Training (CPT): This is full-time or part-time employment that is an integral part of an established curriculum, such as work study, internship, practicum, etc. CPT must relate to a student’s major and be part of their program of study. CPT can be obtained only prior to the completion of the student’s degree, and the student must already have a job offer when they apply for CPT.


Department of Homeland Security (DHS): This U.S. governmental agency manages SEVP and Study in the States, both of which provide resources to prospective international students.


Designated School Official (DSO): All SEVP-certified schools are required to have one DSO. These individuals are responsible for communicating regularly with SEVP. This individual is typically an international student’s greatest resource on campus when it comes to the visa process, maintaining student status, and following proper regulations and guidelines once in the United States.


DS-160: The DS-160 Form is submitted electronically, via the Internet, to the Department of State website. The information entered on the DS-160 is used by Consular Officers to process the visa application. A combination of the information from the form and personal interview will determine an applicant’s eligibility for a nonimmigrant visa.


DS-2019: The Certificate of Eligibility for Exchange Visitor Status is issued to potential J-1 visa applicants; the form is completely unique to each student as it requires its own SEVIS ID number.


EducationUSA: This U.S. Department of State network promotes U.S. higher education to international students by offering guidance about opportunities to study abroad in their home countries. EducationUSA comprises over 400 international student advising centers in more than 170 countries.


F-1: This is the student visa form, issued to international students who are attending an academic or English language program at a U.S. college or university. Students must maintain student status while studying with this visa, which usually means maintaining a full-time course load of a minimum number of credit hours.


General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE): This academically rigorous subject-specific test is generally taken by students in secondary education institutions in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland over a two-year period.


General Certificate of Education Advanced Level (A-Level): This curriculum program, completed with a school-leaving test, is administered in the United Kingdom, but it’s also implemented and recognized in a number of other countries worldwide. The curriculum is split into two parts, studied over two years. The first part, Advanced Subsidiary Level (AS), is a qualification on its own. However, when the second part, the A2 Level, is completed as well, the two form a complete A Level qualification.


I-20: The Certificate of Eligibility for Nonimmigrant Student Status is issued to potential F-1 and M-1 visa applicants by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Students need the I-20 to apply for a nonimmigrant visa and/or to obtain entry to the United States, and they must pay the required international fees to the school they choose to attend.


I-94: This is the Arrival/Departure Record for foreign visitors. Customs officials will compile visitors’ I-94 arrival/departure information automatically from their electronic travel records for air and sea ports of entry or via paper forms for land border ports of entry. Nonimmigrant visitors who need to access their I-94 number can go to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection website.


I-17: The Petition for Approval of School for Attendance by Nonimmigrant Student form is required to be completed and then certified by SEVP before any school in the United States can enroll nonimmigrant students.


Independent Educational Consultant: This is a professional hired and paid only by students and their parents for personalized advice on the university search, application, and admission processes.


Indirect Costs: These are all portions of the total cost of attendance except tuition and fees. This includes books and supplies, room and board, transportation, insurance, a small entertainment allowance, and other personal expenses.


International Baccalaureate (IB): The IB is an international educational foundation offering four programs (divided by age) for children aged 3-19. Its diploma program for ages 16-19 is recognized around the world as a respected, advanced course option for high school students.


International English Language Testing System (IELTS): This test assesses the English language proficiency of people who want to study or work in regions where English is the language of communication. This exam is administered face to face with an examiner and assesses test takers on their listening, reading, writing, and speaking skills. IELTS is accepted by more than 9,000 universities, schools, and organizations in over 145 countries.


J-1: This Exchange Visitor Visa is issued to individuals who are approved to participate in work- or study-based exchange visitor programs. Exchange visitors are expected to return to their home country upon completion of their program.


M-1: This student visa is issued to international students who are attending vocational or technical schools in the United States.


Merit-based financial aid: Also called merit scholarships or merit award, this financial aid is offered in recognition of student achievements, such as in academics, testing, athletics, arts, service, etc. Merit-based aid does not take into account the financial need of the student or family.


Michigan English Language Assessment Battery (MELAB):This standardized exam is for adult, intermediate to advanced non-native speakers of English. Test takers are evaluated for listening, reading, writing, and speaking skills. The written, listening, and grammar/vocabulary components are required. The speaking component, in which you speak with an examiner, may not be offered at every test site and is not automatically included in the test registration. Over 550 U.S. colleges and universities accept the MELAB.


Need-based financial aid: This type of college funding is available to low-income students. Rather than taking your grades or talents into account, these scholarships, grants, and student loans are offered based on your family's income, along with other financial factors.


Optional Practical Training (OPT): Optional Practical Training must relate to a student’s course of study/major and is typically completed after the end of their degree program. A student can apply for 12 months of OPT at the bachelor’s level and another 12 months at the master’s level.


Principal Designated School Official (PDSO): All SEVP-certified schools are required to have at least one Principal Designated School Official; this person serves as the main point of contact for SEVP.


Student and Exchange Visitor Information System (SEVIS): This web-based system was developed by the DHS to maintain information on SEVP-certified schools and the F and M visa students who study there. SEVIS also maintains information on the exchange visitor, program sponsors, and holders of J-1 visa, which are managed through the U.S. Department of State. Through SEVIS, essential I-20 forms are issued to students looking to obtain F or M status visas, student records are transferred to other institutions, and the certification of educational institutions as SEVP-certified are approved and monitored.


Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP): The Student and Exchange Visitor Program (SEVP) is a part of the National Security Investigations Division. It connects government organizations that have an interest in information on nonimmigrants whose primary reason for coming to the United States is to be students.


Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL): This exam is taken to measure a student’s English language proficiency. The exam evaluates test takers in four ways: reading, listening, speaking, and writing. This test can be taken over the internet or in paper format and is recognized by over 9,000 colleges, universities, and agencies in over 130 countries.


U.S. Department of State: This U.S. federal government agency sets forth and maintains the foreign policy of the United States, especially in negotiations with foreign governments and international organizations.


Universities: These schools are often larger institutions offering a variety of undergraduate and master’s/doctoral degree programs. Universities can also have divisions within such as the College of Liberal Arts or College of Science.


U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP): This U.S. federal government agency provides comprehensive border management and control by combining customs, immigration, border security, and agricultural protection all in one department. Students will deal with employees of CBP when they enter and depart the United States.


U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE): ICE enforces federal laws governing border control, customs, trade, and immigration to promote homeland security and public safety

Step-by-Step Financial Aid Guide for International Students (2024)

FAQs

How to get financial aid as an international student? ›

How to Apply for Financial Aid as an International Student. To apply for financial aid, prospective international students may be required to fill out the International Student Financial Aid Application, or ISFAA, or the CSS Profile, which is used by private colleges. Some universities may also have their own forms.

What are the 4 steps in the financial aid process? ›

How Financial Aid Works
  • Start Planning Early.
  • Fill Out the FAFSA® Form.
  • Review Your Aid Offer.
  • Get Your Aid.
  • Graduate and Start Repayment.

What is Step #1 in how do you get financial aid for college? ›

The first step to financial planning for college is to apply for federal student aid. If you haven't submitted it already, complete the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA®) form as soon as you can!

Is it harder for international students to get financial aid? ›

Most foreign citizens are not eligible for federal U.S. Department of Education student aid. This disparity means that international applicants must often demonstrate the ability to pay the full tuition and associated costs, which can amount to upwards of $50,000 annually.

Which US university gives most financial aid to international students? ›

Top Colleges That Offer Full Tuition Fee Waiver for International Students in the U.S.
  • Brandeis University.
  • Duke University.
  • Georgia University.
  • Swarthmore College.
  • Columbia University.
Mar 17, 2024

Can an international student apply for a Pell grant? ›

Federal aid, including Pell Grants and federal student loans, is limited to U.S. citizens and permanent residents. You also need a valid Social Security number to fill out the FAFSA online to qualify for other forms of aid. However, there are some instances where international students can complete the FAFSA .

What are the 7 steps to the FAFSA? ›

Filling Out the FAFSA® Form
  • Creating a StudentAid.gov Account.
  • Gathering Needed Documents.
  • Getting Help.
  • Starting Your FAFSA® Form.
  • Listing Colleges and/or Career Schools.
  • Determining Your Dependency Status.
  • Reporting Parents' Information.
  • Reporting Spouse's Information.

What is the first step to apply for financial aid? ›

The most vital step in applying for federal grants, work-study, and loans for college is the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA®) form.

In what 3 methods might students receive financial aid? ›

Grants: Financial aid that generally doesn't have to be repaid. Loans: Borrowed money for college or career school; your loans must be repaid with interest. Work-Study: A federal work program through which undergraduates and graduate students at participating schools earn money to help pay for school.

Who is eligible for Step 1? ›

Step 1 and Step 2 CK

A medical student officially enrolled in, or a graduate of, a US medical school leading to the DO degree that is accredited by the Commission on Osteopathic College Accreditation (COCA), OR.

Do I apply for FAFSA first or college first? ›

You should apply for admission to the colleges you are interested in BEFORE filing your FAFSA. Once you are accepted to the colleges you have applied to, you can add those schools to receive financial aid award offers from when you file your FAFSA.

How do I start my first aid Step 1? ›

Tips for Effective Study with First Aid Step 1
  1. Create a study schedule: Develop a comprehensive study plan that allocates specific time slots for each section of First Aid USMLE Step 1.
  2. Active learning: Instead of passively reading the material, actively engage with the content.

Should I fill FAFSA as an international student? ›

International students aren't eligible for federally funded aid since government funding is reserved for students who are U.S. citizens or eligible non-citizens. However, submitting a Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) can potentially unlock other aid opportunities for international students to utilize.

Can an international student get a full ride? ›

Yes, you can get a full scholarship as an international student, but it is rare. Studying in the U.S. can be expensive, so finding a scholarship to cover tuition, housing, and other expenses is important.

Can an international student get a SSN? ›

In general, only noncitizens who have DHS' permission to work can apply for an SSN. We suggest you wait 48 hours after reporting to your school before you apply for an SSN. This wait will help ensure we can verify your immigration status with DHS.

Can you get fafsa for an international school? ›

Additionally, an international school may be eligible to participate in the federal student loan program, but the school's medical program may be ineligible to participate.

Can international students get scholarships in the USA? ›

There are scholarships available for many different types of groups, and many are available to international students. These scholarships could be privately funded, through nonprofit organizations, and/or from many other sources.

Are international students eligible for federal work-study? ›

Unfortunately, as work-study is federally funded, the program is not open to international students. This means that some on-campus jobs may be “work-study only,” or only available to domestic students participating in the program.

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