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Federal work study programs: a student guide

In the jigsaw puzzle that is paying for college, work-study jobs are the sky pieces 鈥 they help fill in the gaps between everything else. 

Families receive assistance while filling out FAFSA forms in the library of New Rochelle High School in New Rochelle, New York in 2014.

Ann Hermes/Staff/File

February 28, 2016

Work-study is a federally and sometimes state-funded program that helps college students with financial need get聽part-time jobs.

In the jigsaw puzzle that is paying for college, work-study jobs are the sky pieces 鈥斅爐hey help fill in the gaps between everything else. You typically need other pieces 鈥斅爌ersonal savings, grants, scholarships and student loans 鈥斅爐o complete the full picture. But while work-study is only a small portion of the puzzle, it鈥檚 beneficial for聽students who qualify.

鈥淲ork experience at any level while you鈥檙e in college is going to be a benefit,鈥 says Megan FitzGibbon,聽manager of state scholarship programs聽at聽the Minnesota Office of Higher Education. 鈥淓specially if it鈥檚 related to your degree.鈥

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Work-study basics

  • You have to fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid () to be eligible.
  • Students are typically responsible for securing their own work-study jobs. Just because your financial aid award says you qualify for work-study doesn鈥檛 mean you鈥檙e guaranteed a job.
  • Around 3,400 colleges and universities have a Federal Work-Study Program,聽聽the U.S. Department of Education, but not all schools do. Check with the financial aid offices at the schools you鈥檙e interested in to see if they offer work-study.

Applying for work-study

When you fill out the FAFSA, select the box on the application that indicates you want to be considered for work-study.聽You should fill out the FAFSA as soon as possible because some aid is awarded on a first-come, first-served basis.

Selecting this option doesn鈥檛 guarantee that a work-study option will be included in your financial aid award, and it doesn鈥檛聽bind you to accepting the work-study if it鈥檚 offered.聽

Within a few weeks or months of聽filling out the FAFSA, you鈥檒l get a financial aid award listing the amounts you鈥檙e eligible to get聽from聽loans, grants and work-study. Colleges award work-study funds based on availability of funds, student financial need and other financial aid a student聽is聽eligible for. Although聽your aid award may list a certain amount allocated for work-study 鈥斅爏ay, $5,000 鈥 that doesn鈥檛 mean you automatically get that money. You have to find a work-study-eligible job and then work enough hours to earn that amount.

If work-study is on your financial aid award and you don鈥檛 intend to use it, you can decline the award. However, in most cases, getting a work-study job is a good idea, especially if it decreases your聽student loan borrowing and the amount of student debt you鈥檒l face after graduation.

鈥淲e would much rather have our students turn to grants, work-study 鈥斅燼ny other source of aid 鈥斅燽efore they turn to loans,鈥 says Austin Gentry, financial aid outreach advisor at New Mexico State University.

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Work-study jobs

After you鈥檙e offered a work-study opportunity, you have to find a job that qualifies for the program. Many work-study gigs are on-campus and can include research assistantships, administrative duties in a campus office or聽working in the library. Other聽work-study jobs may聽be off-campus at nonprofit organizations or private companies. A portion of work-study positions are community-service jobs, including tutoring, child care and health care.

Many schools have online portals with work-study job listings, and students are encouraged to apply for jobs that are related to their field of study. Work-study jobs promise flexible hours so you can more easily balance work and school.

Typically you can only earn as much through work-study as the financial aid award stipulates, although some employers make exceptions. For example, if your award allocated $5,000 for work-study, you could work as many hours as it takes聽to earn that amount. But say you reached that amount with two weeks left in the semester. Some employers may allow you to continue working for the remainder of the semester and exceed your allocated amount, but it depends on the employer, Gentry says.

Getting paid

With a work-study job, you鈥檙e guaranteed to earn at least the federal minimum wage, $7.25 an hour. If the state minimum wage is higher, you鈥檒l earn at least the state minimum wage. The average student with a federal work-study job earned $2,619 in 2015, according to the Sallie Mae report聽.

You can opt to get paid by check or direct deposit, or have the money credited to your school account to cover tuition, fees or room and board. There鈥檚 no requirement that you use the money for anything specific; FitzGibbon says many students use their work-study paychecks to cover day-to-day living costs.聽

Reporting work-study income on the FAFSA

The money you earn through work-study is taxable, and you should report聽it on your聽FAFSA the following year in two places. First, include your work-study earnings when you report your total income earned from work聽that year.

Second, a聽later聽question asks how much you earned through work-study the previous year. Fill that out, too, because the money you earn through work-study won鈥檛 count in the calculation that determines how much aid you鈥檙e eligible for the following year.聽

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