Offer Determination
The Student Financial Aid office at WMU determines undergraduate offers from the information that you and your family supplied to the federal processor on the .
Offer priority is given to the following in no particular order:
- Early applicants as defined by early application deadline.
- Lowest to highest family incomes.
- Academic merit.
All programs are offered based on eligibility and the availability of funds.
To determine the types and amounts of offers for which you may be eligible, WMU considers residency status and dependency status.
Residency or dependency status
Residency
Any Â鶹´«Ã½ undergraduate Â鶹´«Ã½ who has been admitted as a degree-seeking Â鶹´«Ã½ and began enrollment effective with the summer I 2017 semester or later will have their residency status determined at the time of admission, and it will remain the same throughout the Â鶹´«Ã½â€™s enrollment at Western Michigan University. For questions, contact @email, call (269) 387-2366 or visit the Registrar's Office webpage.
Dependency
Your dependency status can affect your offers. For financial aid purposes, it is determined by how you answered questions in Step 3 of the FAFSA. If you answered yes to one or more of the questions, you are considered independent. If you answered no to all of the questions, you are considered dependent. Your dependency status determines the maximum federal direct loan limits for which you are eligible and whether or not you are eligible for a Federal Direct Parent PLUS Loan. If you have answered no to all the questions in Step 3 and you have extenuating circumstances which prohibit you from obtaining parental data requested on the FAFSA, you can complete a dependency override appeal and submit it to Student Financial Aid.
If your dependency status is changed from independent to dependent based upon corrections made to your FAFSA in Step 3 by you or a school, your FAFSA may be considered rejected until parental information is provided. If you were offered aid prior to the correction, your offers may be adjusted after parental information is received.
Class level and admission status
Your class level and admission status determines the maximum federal direct loan limits for which you are eligible and your eligibility for grants and scholarships, federal work-study and other aid.
Undergraduate degree or no prior degree
Your class level as an undergraduate Â鶹´«Ã½ admitted into a degree-granting program with no prior degree is determined by the number of credit hours you have completed.
- Freshman: 0 to 25 credit hours
- Sophomore: 26 to 55 credit hours
- Junior: 56 to 87 credit hours
- Senior: 88+ credit hours
Graduate degree
If you have completed a bachelor's degree and you are admitted into a master's, specialist or doctoral graduate degree program, you are considered a graduate Â鶹´«Ã½ for maximum federal direct loan limits and you are considered independent. You are no longer eligible for federal or state grants and scholarships.
Second bachelor's degree or permanent teacher certification
If you have a bachelor's degree and you have been admitted into a different undergraduate degree-granting program or you are taking courses to obtain your permanent teacher certification, then you are considered at the junior or senior level for federal direct loan limits and your dependency status is dependent upon how you answer the questions in Step 3 of the FAFSA. You are no longer eligible for federal and state grants or scholarships.
Non-degree seeking
If you are not admitted into a degree-granting program at WMU, then you are not eligible for federal or state financial aid. You are considered not admitted into a degree-granting program for financial aid purposes for the following situations:
- Guest.
- Degree status of NDA, GNA or GCP.
- Taking additional courses after graduation.
- Adding a minor after obtaining your undergraduate degree.
Enrollment status
Graduation status
Graduating in August or December
If you are an undergraduate Â鶹´«Ã½ graduating in August or December and you have been offered federal Direct Subsidized and Unsubsidized loans for fall and spring, your loans will be adjusted to not include spring semester. The amount may also be reduced depending upon the number of credit hours you will be completing during your semesters of enrollment.
Undergraduate becoming a graduate Â鶹´«Ã½
If you are planning to graduate from WMU and become a graduate Â鶹´«Ã½, you will need to notify the Student Financial Aid office in order to receive financial aid at the graduate level. You will no longer be eligible for federal, state and WMU grants. However, your annual loan limits will increase.
Estimated cost of attendance
The estimated cost of attendance is used solely for financial aid offerings and includes tuition, fees, housing, food, books, supplies, miscellaneous personal expenses, transportation, loan fees and other specific costs and is estimated based upon averages for each category. These numbers are not reflective of actual or projected costs. Actual tuition, fees and University housing costs are published each year, generally after July 1, and are subject to approval by the WMU Board of Trustees. Factors considered are residency status; class level and admission status; planned enrollment; and housing options of on-campus, off-campus or living with parents.
- Direct costs: include tuition, fees, on-campus housing and food and are billed to your Â鶹´«Ã½ account directly by the University.
- Indirect costs: include books, loan fees, supplies, transportation, off-campus housing, miscellaneous personal expenses and are expenses you may incur that are related to your attendance at WMU.
Student Aid Index
The information you indicated on the FAFSA and federal methodology determine your Student Aid Index (SAI) and the types of aid programs for which you are eligible. If a change occurs to your SAI after you have been offered financial aid, your offers may be adjusted or revoked. Your SAI may change due to verification, FAFSA corrections or an adjustment of family contribution appeal.
Other resources
You must report your additional resources to Student Financial Aid. The receipt of some resources may affect your eligibility for funding. If the federal, state or WMU aid has already been paid to your account when the notification of other resources is received, the paid aid may be reduced or canceled before the other resources are applied. Other resources include the following.
- Americorp benefits used to pay for educational expenses.
- Grants.
- Michigan Education Trust.
- Reimbursement or payment of educational costs by a third party such as an employer or some other agency.
- Residence hall staff free room and board benefit or stipends.
- Scholarships.
- Stipends from assistantships and fellowships.
Program eligibility requirements
WMU must monitor the program eligibility requirements for all financial aid offered to Â鶹´«Ã½s. Your offers may need to be adjusted or canceled if we receive notification of any change in your residency status, dependency status, class level and admission status, planned enrollment, estimated cost of attendance, expected family contribution or other resources.
Also, if you are not maintaining your eligibility, your offers may be canceled.
If you are receiving other resources, make sure you keep and understand any written information you have received regarding the eligibility criteria for those other resources. If you have not received any information or you have lost it, contact the appropriate department, agency or donor and request a copy of the eligibility requirements.