Applying for Financial Aid
Most forms of federal, state, and institutional aid are applied for with the
FAFSA. Scholarships are the only exception - please visit our Applying for Scholarships page for more information.
The FAFSA is the application you use to apply for grants, work-study, and educational
loans at nearly every university in the country. The best way for most students to
submit the FAFSA is on-line at FAFSA on the Web. In order to submit the
FAFSA, you’ll need the following information for yourself and your parents
(if you’re dependent):
- Your Social Security Number and/or alien registration number
- Your driver's license (if you have one)
- Your last year’s W-2 Forms and other records of money earned
- Your (and your spouse's, if you are married) last year’s Federal Income Tax Return - IRS Form 1040, 1040A, 1040EZ, 1040Telefile, or foreign tax return; if you have not yet filed, you’ll need good estimates of the amounts involved
- Your last year’s untaxed income records - Social Security, Temporary Assistance to Needy Families, welfare, or veterans benefits records (if applicable)
- Your bank statements
- Your last year’s business and investment mortgage information, business and farm records, stock, bond, and other investment records (if any)
We strongly recommend that you submit your FAFSA on-line. The on-line application
has a number of built-in audits to help you avoid some of the most common errors
people make on the paper FAFSA. Like the paper application, the FAFSA on-line
must be signed. There are two ways of signing your FAFSA if you are submitting
it on-line. First, you can sign it with your Department of Education PIN number,
for which you can easily apply on the FAFSA web site. Dependent students’ parents
can also apply for their own PIN on the web site, and so the entire application
can be electronically signed and submitted. Second, if you don’t want to use t
he PIN, you can print out a signature page at the end of the on-line application -
the student and parent then sign this page and mail it in.
Be sure to avoid these common errors, especially if you are filling out a paper
FAFSA. The FAFSA must be signed by the student and a parent of dependent students -
don’t leave the signatures off! Dependent students must provide parental income
information, even if their parents do not help them with their educational costs.
Once your FAFSA has been submitted, you’ll receive a Student Aid Report (SAR)
from the U.S. Department of Education, either by e-mail or postal mail. When
you receive the SAR, carefully review it to make sure that all the information
is accurate. If everything is accurate, you don’t need to do anything else with
the SAR. Shortly after you receive your SAR, UT Austin will receive the same
information from the U.S. Department of Education. At that point, we may select
you for verification and ask
you to submit additional documentation to our office, or we may simply offer
you some awards.

