Skip to main content
360Blue Financial Strategies
 
630-318-7400 info@threesixtyblue.com Client Login
Wealth Management Pricing About Us Resources Contact Us

    You are here

  1. Home
  2. Blogs
  3. If a College Student Receives an Inheritance, Will It Affect Their Financial Aid?

If a College Student Receives an Inheritance, Will It Affect Their Financial Aid?

Submitted by 360Blue Financial Strategies on June 6th, 2023
  • Share on Facebook
  • Tweet Widget
  • Linkedin Share Button
  • Pinterest

Each year, around 84 percent of college students obtain some form of financial aid.1 To receive financial aid from the government, all students must fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). The FAFSA determines the financial needs of a student based on factors such as current family income and the family’s prior tax year’s income.

With these factors in mind, it’s important to note that large windfalls like an inheritance could affect the amount of financial aid a student receives. If you’re worried about how an inheritance could affect your college-age child or grandchild, here’s what you need to know.

How Can an Inheritance Affect Financial Aid Eligibility?

A substantial increase in a college student’s income may indicate to the government that they are no longer in need of financial assistance (or may need less than before).

Because of the formulas used in the FAFSA, this scenario may occur if a family with a college-bound student receives a substantial inheritance or other financial windfall that adds to the family’s assets.

FAFSA’s asset allocation allowance may exclude certain assets from its formula, depending on the ages of the college student’s parents or guardians. While it depends on a family’s unique circumstances, this threshold often hovers around $50,000 for eligible families.

Because of this, it is important to note that a smaller inheritance may not have too much of an impact on the formula, meaning your child’s financial aid may remain intact.

How Can You Minimize the Effects?

Encouraging your beneficiaries to use the inheritance to pay down debts, such as credit card debt or car loans, may help to minimize the impact. This is because the formula does not take debts into account when calculating how much financial aid a college student needs; in fact, debts may decrease the amount of funds used in FAFSA’s calculations. If you keep the inheritance money in the bank, the government will likely count it.

Managing how the inheritance is received may help to minimize the impact a large inheritance could have on a student’s financial aid. For example, you may decide to put the money into a trust fund and allow for smaller withdrawals to be made each year by your beneficiaries.

If left with no other option, your beneficiaries may be able to provide the government with documentation proving their inability to cover their family contribution to their education expenses, especially if the expected amount was raised in response to a large, one-time inheritance. If the documentation is accepted, you may be able to renegotiate your child’s financial aid package.

If you’re worried about an inheritance decreasing the amount of money your child or grandchild receives in financial aid, there are strategies you can implement to help prevent this from happening. Work with your trusted financial partner to explore these options as you continue the estate planning process.

 

1 https://educationdata.org/financial-aid-statistics

This is for educational purposes only.

Tags:
  • college planning
  • College Savings
  • Education planning

Categories

  • #insurance (1)
  • 2022 (1)
  • 401K (1)
  • Athletes (1)
  • Award Letter (1)
  • Choices (1)
  • College (10)
  • college education (3)
  • college planning (10)
  • College Savings (9)
  • Contributions Limits (1)
  • Documents (1)
  • Education planning (8)
  • Estate (3)
  • Estate Plan (1)
  • Estate Planning (6)
  • Estate Taxes (1)
  • FAFSA (1)
  • File (1)
  • Financial Advice (3)
  • Financial Advisor (10)
  • Financial Aid (2)
  • Financial Planning (23)
  • Financial Planning Month (1)
  • Financial Professional (1)
  • Financial Strategies (2)
  • Financial Wellness (1)
  • Funding (1)
  • Getting Started (1)
  • High Earners (1)
  • Higher Ed (1)
  • Invest (1)
  • IRA (1)
  • Marriage (1)
  • Money (1)
  • October (1)
  • Parents (1)
  • Passive Income (1)
  • Payments (1)
  • Personal Finance (11)
  • Pre-Retiree (1)
  • Probate (1)
  • Required Minimum Distribution (1)
  • Retire (1)
  • Retireees (1)
  • retirees (1)
  • Retirement (22)
  • Retirement Plan Rollovers (1)
  • Retirement planning (7)
  • Salary (1)
  • Second Marriage (1)
  • Social Security (2)
  • Student Loans (1)
  • Tax (4)
  • Tax Bracket (1)
  • Tax Credit (1)
  • Tax Deduction (1)
  • Tax Planning (1)
  • Tax Return (1)
  • Tax Strategies (1)
  • taxes (13)
  • taxes, retirement, personal finance, Financial Planning (7)
  • Tips (1)
  • Unemployment (1)
  • Unemployment Benefits (1)
  • Unexpected Event (1)
  • Value (1)
  • Wills (1)
  • Working (1)

Tell a Friend

Not Sure How to Get Started?

Take a short quiz about your financial outlook and let's see how 360Blue can best serve you.

Start the Quiz

Sign up to our newsletter

Sign up to receive tips about investment strategies, retirement planning, saving for college and more.

What We Offer

Wealth Management Pricing About Us

Resources

Blog FAQ Quarterly Economic Updates Industry Links Events

Client Login

Axos Login Charles Schwab Login 360Blue Plan Portal

Contact Us

630-318-7400 info@threesixtyblue.com 15 Spinning Wheel Road, Suite 211
Hinsdale, Illinois 60521
159 North Sangamon Street, Suite 200
Chicago, IL 60607
(By appointment only)

Securities and Advisory Services offered through United Planners Financial Services Member: FINRA, SIPC. 360Blue Financial Strategies and United Planners are not affiliated.

Check the background of your financial professional on FINRA's BrokerCheck 

This information is intended for use only by residents of  AZ, CA, CO, FL, IL, MI, MO, NV, OH, UT, VA, WI Securities-related services may not be provided to individuals residing in any state not listed above. Insurance-related services may not be provided to individuals residing in any states other than AZ, FL, IL, MI, OH, VA, WI.

A broker-dealer, investment advisor, BD agent, or IA representative may only transact business in a state if first registered appropriately. Follow-up or individualized responses to persons in a state by such a firm or individual that involve either effecting or attempting to effect transactions in securities, or the rendering of personalized investment advice for compensation, will not be made without first complying with appropriate registration requirements.

© 360Blue Financial Strategies. All rights reserved.
Terms & Conditions Privacy Policy

© 2025 360Blue Financial Strategies. All rights reserved.

Website Design For Financial Services Professionals