Why Does My Income Affect Student Aid?

When filing the FAFSA (Free Application for Federal Student Aid), you provide financial information including your own earned income.  “The student’s income is a piece of the calculation used to determine a family’s ability to pay,” Dana Kelly, vice president of professional development for the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators, told The Balance via email. Your income, savings, and assets reported on the FAFSA are used to calculate your expected family contribution, or EFC.  It’s not just your income that can impact your student aid. If you’re married, the EFC includes income earned by your spouse too. And if you’re a dependent student, your parents’ income is used to calculate the EFC.  This EFC is subtracted from your cost of attendance for the year, and the difference is your financial need. This amount determines how much need-based aid you qualify for, such as Pell Grants, work-study, or subsidized loans.

How Student Income Affects Student Aid

Not all of your income while a student will be counted toward your EFC.

Tax Year Used on FAFSA

Students report income from the year prior to the start of the academic year instead of the current income year. For the 2023-24 school year, for example, students report 2021 adjusted gross income on the FAFSA. You can find your adjusted gross income (AGI) on Form 1040.

Income Allowances

The EFC formula includes an income protection allowance that excludes a certain amount of your earnings from use for college costs. That allowance for the 2023-24 school year is $7,600 for dependent students and $11,820 for single independent students. “Any earnings [students] have up to that amount will not affect the size of their EFC and therefore not reduce any financial aid eligibility they may have,” MorraLee Keller, director of technical assistance at the National College Attainment Network, told The Balance in an email. Other income allowances can apply, such as not counting income taxes and Social Security taxes.

Assessment of Income

Once the EFC formula has applied allowances to your income, the remaining amount is considered “available income.” According to the EFC formula, 50% of a student’s available income is earmarked for payment of your educational expenses.

Maximize Student Aid Based on Your Job

Working through college is a smart way to help cover your costs. But be aware that the impact of your income on federal student aid can depend on the type of job you have. 

Summer Job or Internship

These types of jobs might not affect your student aid. Earnings from a summer job, internship, or part-time job alone are likely to fall within the income protection allowance—$7,600 for dependent students or $11,820 for independent students for the 2023-2024 academic year. Some students might earn more, of course, so remember that income above this amount can change your student aid eligibility.

Federal Work-Study

One form of federal student aid is federal work-study, which subsidizes employers’ wages paid to eligible students. There’s good news about this type of employment, too. “Earning money through the work-study program has no effect on a student’s EFC or aid eligibility,” Keller said. It also won’t count toward your income protection allowance, either. You are asked to report this income on the FAFSA, but don’t sweat it. “Work-study earnings are subtracted from [available income] in the EFC formula,” Keller said.

Previous Full-Time Job

A lot can happen in the 1.5 years between earning the income that’s used on your FAFSA and actually paying for college. Maybe you lost a full-time job this year, or quit one to attend school. According to Kelly, if your current income is substantially lower than what was reported on the FAFSA, talk to your school’s financial aid office. “Such students may qualify for special consideration, which could provide additional assistance,” she said. 

Current Full-Time Job

If you wish to continue working full-time while enrolled in college, it’s worth filing a FAFSA to see what types of student aid you’re offered.  If a higher full-time income disqualifies you from need-based aid, consider your options. You could talk to your employer about going part-time, if you think that could help you gain access to more need-based aid, for example. Or you can look into other ways besides federal assistance to pay for college.

When Your Income Is Too High for Federal Student Aid

If your income or other factors mean you didn’t get enough student aid, keep at it. Seek out alternative funds, such as: Correction - Jan. 23, 2023: This article has been updated to correct the tax year applicants should use for income details on the 2023-24 FAFSA form.