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How to Read a Financial Aid Award Letter: What Every Number Actually Means

Level All Team

June 25, 2026

5 min

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Your financial aid award letter is the document that tells you what a college will actually cost your family — but it is rarely as clear as it should be. There is no standard format for these letters. Every school designs its own, uses its own terminology, and presents the numbers in ways that can make an expensive school look affordable and an affordable school look expensive. 

A college that offers you $40,000 in “total aid" may be leaving out the fact that $22,000 of it is loans you have to pay back with interest. This guide walks you through every line of your award letter, the one calculation that tells you your real cost, and how to compare offers across multiple schools correctly.

What Is a Financial Aid Award Letter?

A financial aid award letter is a document from a college that outlines the financial assistance being offered to help you pay for one year of attendance. It is sent after you are admitted and after the college processes your FAFSA. Most award letters arrive in March or April for students applying Regular Decision, or in December for Early Decision and Early Action applicants.

The letter shows your cost of attendance, the types and amounts of aid being offered, and — if the school does this clearly — what you will actually owe after aid is applied. The problem is that “what you will owe" is often buried, obscured by a high total aid number that includes loans, or left for you to calculate yourself.

FAFSA 2027–28

What Is Included in a Financial Aid Award Letter?

Every letter will show your cost of attendance and some combination of grants, scholarships, work study, and loans. What varies is how those items are grouped, labeled, and whether free money and borrowed money are clearly separated. Here are the main categories you will see:

  • Cost of Attendance (COA) This is the total estimated cost of one year at that school. It includes tuition and fees, room and board (or an estimate if you live off campus), books and supplies, transportation, and personal expenses. This is the starting number everything else gets subtracted from.
  • Grants Free money from the federal government or the college itself. Federal Pell Grants are need-based and go to undergraduate students with the lowest Student Aid Indexes. Institutional grants come directly from the college. You do not pay grants back.
  • Scholarships Free money awarded based on merit, background, major, or other criteria. Like grants, scholarships do not need to be repaid. Some are renewable each year if you maintain a certain GPA; confirm the terms.
  • Federal Work Study A program that allows you to earn money through a part-time campus job to help pay for school. It is not cash deposited into your account — you earn it over the semester in your paycheck. It is still free money in the sense that you do not borrow it, but you do have to work for it.
  • Federal Loans Borrowed money that you must repay with interest after leaving school. Subsidized loans do not accrue interest while you are enrolled at least half time. Unsubsidized loans begin accruing interest immediately. Both are included in most award letters as though they are aid — technically they are, but they are not free.
  • Parent PLUS Loans Loans taken out in a parent’s name, not the student’s. They carry higher interest rates than standard federal student loans. Not every school includes these in the initial award letter, but some do, which can inflate the total aid figure significantly.

Subsidized vs Unsubsidized Student Loans

How Work Study Actually Works

What Is the Difference Between Free Money and Borrowed Money in Your Package?

This is the most important thing to understand about your award letter, and the thing most families get wrong.

Free money — grants and scholarships — reduces what you owe. You receive it and do not pay it back. It directly lowers your cost.

Borrowed money — loans — does not reduce what you owe. It shifts when you pay. You will repay every dollar of it, plus interest, starting after you leave school.

Many award letters present both categories under the same heading, often labeled “Total Financial Aid" or “Total Award." A letter showing $38,000 in total aid may contain $16,000 in grants, $6,000 in work study, and $16,000 in loans. The number that actually reduces your cost is $16,000 — not $38,000. If you base your school decision on the headline number, you are comparing the wrong figure.

When you read your award letter, separate every item into two columns: free money (grants and scholarships) and money you borrow or earn (loans and work study). The total of your free money column is the only number that directly reduces what your family owes. That is the number to compare across schools.54% of all undergraduate students identify as first-generation.

What Is Net Price and How Do You Calculate It?

Net price is the amount your family is actually responsible for covering after all grants and scholarships are subtracted from the cost of attendance. It is the truest single-number comparison point between schools.

The formula is straightforward:

Net Price = Cost of Attendance minus Grants and Scholarships

(Do not subtract loans or work study — those are not free money.)

For example: If a school’s cost of attendance is $58,000 and your award letter shows $12,000 in grants and $8,000 in scholarships, your net price is $38,000. That is what your family needs to cover — through savings, income, loans you choose to take, or additional scholarships you find. 

Run this calculation for every school on your list and put the numbers side by side. The school with the highest sticker price may have the lowest net price once you account for its institutional grant. The school that sent the most impressive-looking award letter may actually cost your family more because its total was padded with loans.

How Do You Compare Financial Aid Offers From Multiple Schools?

Comparing financial aid packages correctly requires looking past the headline numbers on each letter and building a clean side-by-side view.

  1. Find the Cost of Attendance for each school. This is usually listed at the top of the award letter or on the school’s financial aid website. Confirm you are using the same components — some schools include travel and personal expenses, others do not.
  2. Identify all grants and scholarships. List every item that does not need to be repaid. Note whether any are one-time awards or renewable.
  3. Calculate net price for each school. Cost of attendance minus grants and scholarships. Write this number down for every school.
  4. Look at the loan amounts. Note how much federal loan eligibility is listed and what types — subsidized or unsubsidized. This tells you how much you would borrow if you accepted the full loan package.
  5. Ask whether the grants renew. Some institutional grants are guaranteed for four years if you maintain eligibility. Others are first-year-only. A school offering $20,000 in grants for one year and $5,000 after that is a different proposition than one offering $12,000 every year.

Once you have net price and renewal terms for each school, you have a real comparison. A school that looked unaffordable based on its sticker price may be the best financial choice. A school with a generous-sounding total aid package may actually cost significantly more over four years.

What Is Financial Aid Gapping?

Financial aid gapping happens when a college’s aid package does not fully cover the difference between your cost of attendance and your demonstrated financial need as calculated from your FAFSA. In other words, the school has left a gap between what it calculates your family can pay and what it is actually offering.

Gapping is common, especially at schools with limited financial aid budgets and at schools where your application is strong enough to get admitted but your financial need profile does not match their typical aid recipient. It is not a mistake — it is a deliberate decision by the financial aid office about how to allocate limited funds.

If you suspect you have been gapped, compare your Student Aid Index from your FAFSA Submission Summary to the aid package you received. If the gap between your SAI and your net price is larger than the school’s stated cost of attendance justifies, it is worth contacting the financial aid office to ask for a review.

What Is a Financial Aid Funding Gap

What Should You Do If Your Financial Aid Package Is Not Enough?

You can appeal. Most colleges have a formal process for requesting a review of your financial aid award, and it is more common than most students realize. The key is approaching it with documentation and a clear, specific case.

  • Contact the financial aid office directly. Email or call and ask to request a professional judgment review or a financial aid appeal. Use professional language and be specific about what has changed or what information you want them to consider.
  • Document any special circumstances. If your family’s financial situation has changed since you filed your FAFSA — job loss, medical expenses, divorce, a significant reduction in income — put it in writing and include supporting documents. Financial aid offices have authority to adjust awards based on current circumstances that the FAFSA formula does not capture.
  • Mention competing offers. If another school offered you a more favorable package, you can share that information with the financial aid office. This is not negotiating in a combative sense — it is providing context. Some schools will adjust their offer when they see that a comparable school is offering more grant money.
  • Ask about additional scholarships. Ask the financial aid office whether any institutional scholarships exist that you were not automatically considered for. Some awards require a separate application or have specific eligibility criteria that are not broadly advertised.
  • Consider outside scholarships. Scholarships from organizations outside your college can reduce your remaining balance. Use Level All’s Scholarship Finder to search for awards matched to your profile.

Frequently Asked Questions

When does a financial aid award letter arrive?

For Regular Decision applicants, most award letters arrive in March or April alongside or shortly after your acceptance letters. For Early Decision and Early Action applicants, award letters typically arrive in December. Some schools send a financial aid estimate before the final letter — confirm which one you have received and whether the numbers are final.

What is the difference between net price and net cost?

Net price subtracts only grants and scholarships from the cost of attendance — the free money. Net cost subtracts all aid, including loans. Net price is the more useful number for comparing schools because it shows what you actually owe before you decide how much to borrow. Net cost can be misleading because it makes the total look lower by including borrowed money as though it were free.

Do I have to accept all the aid in my award letter?

No. You can accept, decline, or partially accept any component of your award package. You can accept the grants and scholarships, accept part of the loan offer, and decline the rest. You do not have to take every loan offered just because it appears in the letter. Only borrow what you need.

What if my award letter does not show a net price?

Many do not — and that is a problem the financial aid industry has been criticized for for years. If your letter does not calculate net price for you, do it yourself. Find the total cost of attendance, identify every item that is a grant or scholarship, add those up, and subtract them from the cost of attendance. That number is your net price. Write it down and repeat the process for every school on your list.

Can financial aid change from year to year?

Yes. Federal aid is recalculated annually based on your updated FAFSA. Institutional grants can change if your family’s financial situation changes, if the school adjusts its aid policy, or if you lose eligibility by falling below a GPA threshold. Always check whether institutional grants are guaranteed for all four years or only for the first year, and ask what the conditions are for renewal.

What is the difference between a subsidized and unsubsidized loan in my award letter?

Both are federal student loans, but they handle interest differently. With a subsidized loan, the government pays the interest while you are enrolled at least half time, so the balance does not grow while you are in school. With an unsubsidized loan, interest begins accruing immediately after disbursement, even while you are still a student. Always accept subsidized loans before unsubsidized if you need to borrow.

Subsidized vs Unsubsidized Student Loans

Compare Your Financial Aid Offers Side by Side

Once you have your award letters in hand, the next step is comparing them clearly against each other. Level All’s financial planning tools help you see your real cost at every school so you can make a decision based on what you will actually pay — not the headline number on the letter. Create your account to access these tools and more.

See Your Real Cost at Every School with Level All

About the Author

Level All Team

We’re a mix of educators, career coaches, admissions officers, counselors, authors, and copywriters. Our mission is to provide clear, actionable college and career guidance for learners nationwide.

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