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How to Read Your Financial Aid Award Letter (and Know What College Really Costs)

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A financial aid award letter looks official, generous, and reassuring.

It’s also one of the easiest documents to misunderstand — and one of the fastest ways to underestimate what college will actually cost.

This guide shows you exactly how to read a financial aid award letter, line by line, so you can:

  • Separate free money from debt
  • Calculate your real out-of-pocket cost
  • Compare offers from different schools fairly

You do not need financial training to do this. You just need the right order.


Step 1: Find the School’s “Cost of Attendance” (COA)

Every award letter is built around a number called Cost of Attendance.

This is the school’s estimate of one year of college, including:

  • Tuition and fees
  • Room and board
  • Books and supplies
  • Transportation
  • Personal expenses

Remember this: COA is not your bill. It’s a budgeting estimate used to calculate aid eligibility.

Still, you need this number because everything else is subtracted from it.

What to do now

  • Circle or highlight the total Cost of Attendance
  • Ignore aid for the moment

You are anchoring the math.

👉 Learn: How to Calculate the Real Cost of College (With a Simple Formula)


Step 2: Separate “Free Money” From Everything Else

Award letters mix grants, scholarships, loans, and work programs together — which makes offers look better than they are.

Your job is to split them into two categories.

Category 1: Free Money (You Keep This)

These reduce your cost without repayment.

Common labels:

  • Grants (Pell, state, institutional)
  • Scholarships (merit or need-based)

Add these together first.

Category 2: Not Free Money (You Repay or Earn This)

These do not reduce cost automatically.

Common labels:

  • Federal student loans
  • Parent PLUS loans
  • Private loans
  • Federal Work-Study

Loans increase future cost.
Work-study requires hours worked.

Do not subtract these yet.


Step 3: Calculate Your Net Price (This Is the Key Number)

Now do the math most award letters avoid doing for you.

Formula

Cost of Attendance
− Grants
− Scholarships
= Net Price

This is the true cost before loans or work.

Worked example

  • Cost of Attendance: $32,000
  • Grants: $8,000
  • Scholarships: $4,000

$32,000 − $12,000 = $20,000

👉 $20,000 is what this year actually costs your family.

Everything else is a way to pay that $20,000.


Step 4: Understand What Loans Are Being Offered (and to Whom)

Now look at loans — but don’t treat them as aid.

Common federal loans:

  • Direct Subsidized Loans (interest paused while in school)
  • Direct Unsubsidized Loans (interest accrues immediately)

Important questions to answer:

  • Is the loan in the student’s name or parent’s name?
  • How much interest accrues while in school?
  • Is the loan optional or automatically assumed?

Smile Money Rule: Loans are a payment method, not a discount.


Step 5: Read Federal Work-Study Correctly (Most People Don’t)

Work-study is often misunderstood.

What it actually means:

  • You may qualify for a campus job
  • You earn money over time
  • You do not receive this money upfront

Work-study:

  • Does not reduce your bill automatically
  • Depends on job availability
  • Requires time and scheduling

Do not subtract work-study from cost unless you plan to work those hours.

👉 Learn: How to Qualify for Federal Work-Study


Step 6: Identify “Gap Amount” You Must Cover

Now calculate what’s still uncovered.

Formula

Net Price
− Grants & Scholarships
− Family savings or payments
= Funding gap

This gap is typically filled by:

  • Student loans
  • Parent loans
  • Income
  • External scholarships

If this gap feels unmanageable, that’s a signal — not a failure.

👉 Explore: How to Negotiate Your Financial Aid Package (What to Say and When) →


Step 7: Compare Award Letters Across Schools (Side-by-Side)

Never compare schools by:

  • Total aid offered
  • Number of line items
  • Emotional tone of the letter

Always compare:

  • Net price
  • Total debt required
  • Parent loan expectations

Create a simple comparison table:

  • School name
  • Net price
  • Student loans per year
  • Parent loans required

This turns confusion into clarity fast.


Step 8: Know What Questions to Ask the Financial Aid Office

If something doesn’t make sense, that’s normal.

Ask:

  • Which aid is guaranteed vs. renewable?
  • Will grants change after the first year?
  • What happens if GPA drops?
  • Can this package be reconsidered?

You are allowed to ask. This is a negotiation conversation, not a test.


Action: Can You Explain the Offer in One Sentence?

You should now be able to say:

“This school will cost us about $___ per year, and we’ll need about $___ in loans to make it work.”

If you can’t say that clearly, go back to Step 3.


Final Thought: Clarity Beats Generosity

The best financial aid package isn’t the one that looks generous.
It’s the one you understand and can live with — year after year.

Next Steps:

👉 Learn: How to Pay for College Without Over-Borrowing →
👉 Read: How to Find Grants for College (That Aren’t Loans) →
👉 Learn: How to Find Scholarships That Actually Fit You
👉 Compare: Student Loans in the Marketplace →

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Author Bio

Picture of Jason Vitug

Jason Vitug

Jason Vitug is the founder and CEO of phroogal. His writings explore the intersection of money, wellness, and life. Jason is a New York Times reviewed author, speaker, and world traveler, and Plutus-award winning creator. He holds an MBA from Norwich University and a BS in Finance from Rutgers University. View my favorite things
Picture of Jason Vitug

Jason Vitug

Jason Vitug is the founder and CEO of phroogal. His writings explore the intersection of money, wellness, and life. Jason is a New York Times reviewed author, speaker, and world traveler, and Plutus-award winning creator. He holds an MBA from Norwich University and a BS in Finance from Rutgers University. View my favorite things