
Filing FAFSA as an Independent or Homeless Youth
By Declan Hayes ·
- college
- financial-aid
- fafsa
- independent-youth
If you cannot safely contact your parents, you can file the FAFSA as an independent student. Here is how to request a dependency override and get financial aid for college.
Filing FAFSA Without Your Parents
Filling out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) usually requires your parents' tax information and signatures. But if you cannot safely contact them, or if you have been kicked out, abandoned, or abused, you do not have to give up on college.
You can file as an independent student. This means the government will only look at your income, not your parents', which often qualifies you for the maximum amount of financial aid, including Pell Grants.
How to Apply as Independent
When you fill out the FAFSA online, it will ask you a series of "Dependency Status" questions.
If you answer "Yes" to any of the following, you are automatically considered independent:
- Are you an unaccompanied youth who is homeless, or self-supporting and at risk of being homeless?
- Since you turned 13, were both your parents deceased, were you in foster care, or were you a ward of the court?
- Are you an emancipated minor or in legal guardianship as determined by a court?
If you meet these criteria, the FAFSA will skip the parent information section entirely.
Proving Your Status
You will likely need to provide proof of your situation to your college's financial aid office. This is often the most stressful part, but you don't have to face it alone.
You can ask for a letter from:
- Your high school McKinney-Vento liaison
- A social worker or case manager
- A director of an emergency shelter or transitional living program
Words to say
I am an unaccompanied homeless youth and I need to submit my FAFSA as an independent student. I need help getting a determination letter to prove my status to my college.
What if I don't meet the automatic criteria?
If you don't fit into the exact categories above, but you still cannot safely contact your parents (due to abuse, neglect, incarceration, or abandonment), you can ask for a Dependency Override.
You must contact the Financial Aid Administrator (FAA) at the college you plan to attend. They have the legal authority to override your dependency status based on your "unusual circumstances."
They will likely ask you to write a personal statement explaining why you cannot contact your parents, and they may ask for third-party letters of support (from teachers, counselors, or religious leaders who know your situation).
Words to say
I have unusual circumstances and cannot safely contact my parents or obtain their information. I would like to request a Dependency Override for my FAFSA. What documentation do you need from me?
Words to say
Do not let the paperwork stop you. Financial aid officers are trained to handle these situations, and there are federal laws designed specifically to help you access higher education.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is FAFSA?
FAFSA stands for the Free Application for Federal Student Aid—the form you use to apply for federal financial aid for college, including Pell Grants, work-study, and federal student loans. Colleges also use it to decide how much need-based aid to offer you.
Do I need my parents' tax information to file FAFSA?
No. If you are unaccompanied, homeless, or unable to contact your parents due to abuse or abandonment, you can be classified as an independent student and omit their tax information.
What is a dependency override?
A dependency override is when a college financial aid administrator decides you should be treated as an independent student due to unusual circumstances, such as abuse, neglect, or abandonment.
Related Guide
Unaccompanied Youth Guide