Aid for Graduate & Professional Students
The first step in applying for financial aid is to submit the each academic year. The FAFSA determines your eligibility for grants, loans, work-study and need-based scholarships. For full financial aid consideration your FAFSA must be on file in our office by March 1. Get details about the financial aid process.
Graduate students are primarily offered student loans, but there may be additional funding available through specific graduate departments.
Financial Aid & Your Enrollment
As of Fall 2021, the minimum enrollment status for financial aid purposes is as follows:
- Graduate - half time, 3 to 5 credit hours (6+ is full time)
- Law - half time, 5 to 9 credit hours (10+ is full time)
Check your enrollment status to be sure you're meeting your enrollment minimum.
The following links will provide you with more details about the financial aid process.
- Types of Aid (including how to apply)
- Estimating College Costs (including how aid is determined)
- Special Circumstances
Here is some useful information to help you apply for financial aid for the first time at the Â鶹Ãâ·Ñ°æÏÂÔØ.
- Financial aid offers emailed to new students as early as mid-February
- Grants, scholarships and work-study automatically accepted for you while loans must be accepted in (once you have access)
- Federal Graduate PLUS loans require an
- Federal Direct Loans and Federal Graduate PLUS loans require a Master Promissory Note (MPN) and entrance counseling to be completed, but typically this only has to be signed the first time a loan is borrowed.