As fall tuition bills drop, Gen Z's not ready to pay for college this year, survey says

Fall tuition bills for the upcoming academic year are arriving in mailboxes this month, but only 4% of Gen Z students say they’re fully funded for the entire school year, data shows.

As of June, 90% of college-bound Gen Z students said they don’t yet know how they’ll fully pay for school, according to a poll of 9,097 students surveyed by the application site ScholarshipOwl. Gen Z was born between 1997 and 2012 and includes the high school class of 2024. A fifth said they still needed more than $20,000 to meet the year’s tuition.

Some students will indeed have enough saved to pay that first tuition bill landing in their mailboxes now, but not knowing how to pay for the rest of the year can be stressful and wreak havoc on their future college plans.

If you find during the year, you can’t scrounge up the rest of the money, it’s “that much harder to potentially have to change direction in (the) middle of (the) school year,” said ScholarshipOwl financial expert Jennifer Finetti.

Of the 1,500 college students polled by education software firm Ellucian who dropped out, 19% cited financial uncertainty as the leading cause. The survey was taken between Feb. 26 and March 1.

How much do students need to pay for the full 2024-25 year?

Among the 90% of students who don’t have all the funds available to pay for college in the coming school year, ScholarshipOwl said:

◾ 24% need another $5,000.

◾ 22% need another $10,000.

◾ 13% need another $15,000.

◾ 11% need another $20,000.

◾ 20% need another $25,000.

Only about 4% said they’re fully funded for the year, and roughly 7% said they weren't attending college this year (numbers are rounded).

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Why do so many families still have a funding gap?

The delayed and difficult rollout of the 2024-25 Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), inflation and high interest rates all contributed to the tuition shortfall, experts said.

◾ A pared-down FAFSA didn’t launch until the very end of 2023, later than the usual Oct. 1 release, which pushed back application completion, processing and awarding of financial aid. Then, a string of technical issues and incorrect calculations caused further delays, giving students a “much smaller window to make an informed college choice,” Finetti said.

Since FAFSA was messy, many people delayed or skipped completing FAFSA. As of June 30, the number of high school graduates who completed the student aid application was down 11.6% from a year ago, said Jack Wallace, director of governmental relations at student loan refinancer Yrefy.