Colleges That Claim to Meet Full Financial Need

For most parents, paying for college isn’t easy; but some schools offer enough institutional dollars to students to offset expensive sticker prices.

Many schools that report meeting the full financial need of students are private colleges and universities. For the 2015-2016 school year, only 66 colleges and universities out of 1,100 schools claimed to meet full financial need, according to data reported to U.S. News in an annual survey.

The amount given in financial need is usually decided by the information that a family provides on the Free Application for Federal Student Aid. On the FAFSA, families submit financial information such as income, tax data, assets and household size. From this information, a family’s estimated contribution is determined.

[Discover what you need to know about FAFSA changes.]

Financial awards from colleges and universities use a combination of loans, scholarships, grants and work-study to cover the gap between the total cost of attendance and the amount a family is expected to pay. A school that claims to meet 100 percent covers the gap entirely.

For the most part, National Liberal Arts Colleges represent the bulk of these schools that meet full demonstrated need with 40 schools in total, followed by National Universities with 25. Only one Regional University made the list: Walla Walla University in Washington.

[Discover the 2017 Best Value Schools.]

More than half of the schools that make this list are need blind: a policy that judges students on their merits, not on their ability to pay tuition. Some of the schools with this policy include Amherst College in Massachusetts, Yale University in Connecticut and Stanford University in California — to name a few.

Only two public universities — the University of Virginia and University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill — that are also National Universities reported meeting 100 percent of financial need. Both schools also practice need-blind admissions.

[Video: Finding a best value college.]

Several schools that don’t appear on the list were very close to meeting full need, including Johns Hopkins University in Maryland at 99.9 percent, SUNY Polytechnic Institute at 99 percent and the University of Florida at 99 percent.

Below are the colleges and universities that claimed to meet 100 percent of demonstrated financial need for full-time, degree-seeking undergraduates in fall 2015.

School name (state) U.S. News rank and category
Amherst College (MA) 2, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Barnard College (NY) 27 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Bates College (ME) 27 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Boston College 31, National Universities
Bowdoin College (ME) 6, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Brown University (RI) 14, National Universities
Bryn Mawr College (PA) 31, National Liberal Arts Colleges
California Institute of Technology 12 (tie), National Universities
Carleton College (MN) 7 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Claremont McKenna College (CA) 9 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Colby College (ME) 12 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Colgate University (NY) 12 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
College of the Holy Cross (MA) 32 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Colorado College 24 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Columbia University (NY) 5 (tie), National Universities
Connecticut College 50, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Cornell University (NY) 15 (tie), National Universities
Dartmouth College (NH) 11, National Universities
Davidson College (NC) 9 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Duke University (NC) 8 (tie), National Universities
Franklin and Marshall College (PA) 47 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Georgetown University (DC) 20 (tie), National Universities
Grinnell College (IA) 19 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Hamilton College (NY) 12 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Harvard University (MA) 2, National Universities
Harvey Mudd College (CA) 21 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Haverford College (PA) 12 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Kenyon College (OH) 27 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Lafayette College (PA) 36 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Macalester College (MN) 24 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Massachusetts Institute of Technology 7, National Universities
Middlebury College (VT) 4 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Mount Holyoke College (MA) 36 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Northwestern University (IL) 12 (tie), National Universities
Oberlin College (OH) 24 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Occidental College (CA) 44 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Pomona College (CA) 7 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Princeton University (NJ) 1, National Universities
Rice University (TX) 15 (tie), National Universities
Salem College (NC) 122 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Scripps College (CA) 23, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Smith College (MA) 12 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Soka University of America (CA) 41 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Stanford University (CA) 5 (tie), National Universities
Swarthmore College (PA) 4 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Thomas Aquinas College (CA) 53 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Trinity College (CT) 38 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Tufts University (MA) 27 (tie), National Universities
Union College (NY) 38 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
University of Chicago 3 (tie), National Universities
University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill 30, National Universities
University of Notre Dame (IN) 15 (tie), National Universities
University of Pennsylvania 8 (tie), National Universities
University of Richmond (VA) 27 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
University of Southern California 23, National Universities
University of Virginia 24 (tie), National Universities
Vanderbilt University (TN) 15 (tie), National Universities
Vassar College (NY) 12 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Wake Forest University (NC) 27 (tie), National Universities
Walla Walla University (WA) 52 (tie), Regional Universities (West)
Washington and Lee University (VA) 11, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Washington University in St. Louis 19, National Universities
Wellesley College (MA) 3, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Wesleyan University (CT) 21 (tie), National Liberal Arts Colleges
Williams College (MA) 1, National Liberal Arts Colleges
Yale University (CT) 3 (tie), National Universities

The financial need data above are correct as of Sept. 19, 2016. For complete financial aid data, full rankings and much more, access the U.S. News College Compass.

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Colleges That Claim to Meet Full Financial Need originally appeared on usnews.com

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