College scholarships are one of the best ways to pay for school, but these common scholarship mistakes are costing students thousands of dollars.
There are many benefits to receiving one or more private scholarships. It eases the financial burden of getting a college degree and minimizes the need for student loans. And it allows you to focus on your studies while at school.
But scholarship applicants can face several potential pitfalls along the way. The odds of winning scholarships are often low, and you must be mindful of scholarship scams, displacement, and scholarship taxes.
By learning how to anticipate and respond to these scholarship gotchas, you can increase your chances of scholarship success. This article guides you through the many considerations you need to make before applying for scholarships, so you can feel more confident throughout the process.
Scholarship Mistakes: What To Consider Before Applying
Many students have failed to qualify for the scholarships they wanted because they weren't aware of the problems that can arise when applying. Let's take a closer look at some common hurdles, starting with the odds of winning a scholarship in the first place.
Low Odds Of Winning A Scholarship
For most students, private scholarships are part of their plan for paying for college, but not the entire plan.
More than 1.5 million private scholarships are awarded each year, with a total value of more than $6 billion, according to data from the National Postsecondary Student Aid Study (NPSAS). Most of this money goes to students in Bachelor’s degree programs. Unfortunately, your odds of winning a private scholarship are pretty low.
Among students pursuing a Bachelor’s degree, only about 1 in 8 use private scholarships to pay for college, at an average annual amount of $4,200, or 15% of the average annual cost of attendance at a 4-year college.
Very few students win a “free ride” through private scholarships alone. Consider the following statistics:
- Only 0.1% of undergraduate students won $25,000 or more in private scholarships.
- Less than one percent (0.9%) won $10,000 or more in scholarships.
- Almost all private scholarship recipients (97%) win $2,500 or less in scholarships.
Students with better grades and test scores are more likely to win private scholarships.
- Students with at least a 3.0 high school Grade Point Average (GPA) are twice as likely to win a private scholarship, and represent more than four-fifths of private scholarship recipients.
- Students with above-average SAT and ACT test scores are twice as likely to win private scholarships.
- More than half of students with a perfect SAT test score of 1600 win private scholarships
- More than a third of students with a perfect ACT test score of 36 win private scholarships.
However, less than 0.1% of admissions test-takers get a perfect SAT or ACT test score each year.
Tips For Finding Scholarships
Here are some tips to help you increase your odds of winning a private scholarship.
- Start searching for scholarships as soon as possible. The earlier you start searching for scholarships, the fewer deadlines you’ll miss. If you wait until spring to start searching for scholarships, you will miss half the deadlines. You don't have to wait until you are a high school senior to apply. There are scholarships for students in elementary and middle school, not just high school. You can also continue to win scholarships after you enroll in college.
- Search the free online scholarship matching websites. There is a lot of overlap among the scholarship databases, but each database has a few scholarships that aren’t included in the other databases. The largest and most popular scholarship search sites are Fastweb.com and the College Board’s Big Future.
- When using a scholarship matching website, answer the optional questions for more matches. Students who answer the optional questions in addition to the required questions tend to match with twice as many scholarships.
- Look for near-miss matches, where you just barely missed matching the scholarship. Sometimes, a 0.1 point increase in your GPA or 50 point increase in your SAT test score can help you qualify for more scholarships. This can motivate you to study harder. That said, don’t apply for a scholarship if you don’t satisfy the selection criteria.
- Search for scholarships offline in addition to online. Online scholarship searches involve a more targeted matching process, while searching for scholarships offline is more exploratory. Look for scholarship listing books in the jobs and careers section of your local public library or bookstore. But, check the copyright date first. If the book is more than a year or two old, it is too old to be useful, since about 10% of the information changes every year. You can find local awards posted to a bulletin board outside your school counselor’s office or on the school’s website.
Note: You will increase your odds of winning by applying to more scholarships.
- Apply to every scholarship for which you are eligible. It's been said that you miss 100% of the shots you don't take. This holds true with scholarships. You can’t win if you don’t apply. It’s a numbers game. There’s an element of luck, not just skill, in who wins. The more applications you submit, the greater your chances are of winning one. Applying takes a lot of work, but it gets easier after a while, since you can start reusing essays for each new scholarship program with just a few minor tweaks.
- Pursue less competitive scholarships. This includes small awards and essay contests. Winning a few small scholarships can quickly add up to a lot of money.
- Ask your principal or school counselor to nominate you. Provide them with a copy of your accomplishments resume, which will help them complete the nomination. An accomplishments resume summarizes your hobbies, activities, honors, and awards.
Scholarship Myths: The Unclaimed Aid Myth
There is an ongoing myth that falsely claims that billions of dollars of scholarships go unclaimed each year. This falsehood is often promoted by paid scholarship matching services to convince students to use their scholarship databases. Free scholarship matching services are better, so there’s no reason to ever pay money to search for scholarships.
Besides, the reality is that almost all scholarship programs receive many qualified applicants for each scholarship. Sometimes, hundreds of students apply for a single scholarship award.
A few scholarships do go unclaimed because due to highly restrictive selection criteria. For example, the Zolp scholarship is available at Loyola University of Chicago for students born with a last name of Zolp. The name must appear on both their birth certificate and christening certificate. You can’t change your name to qualify.
There is one form of financial aid that does go unclaimed despite millions of students being eligible, and that’s the Federal Pell Grant. About 2 million students in 2015-16 who did not file the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) would have qualified for a Federal Pell Grant if they had filed the FAFSA. Of them, 1.2 million would have qualified for the maximum Federal Pell Grant.
Beware Of Potential Scholarship Scams
It's important to be aware of the various scholarship scams that are continually circulating. Here are some rules to follow to avoid getting scammed:
- Never pay money to get money (it’s a scam). Scholarships are about giving away money, not getting money. Scams are focused on getting you to pay them money or identity theft. A good rule of thumb: Never invest more than a postage stamp to find out information or apply for a scholarship.
- Do not give out your personal information. You won't need to provide your bank account or credit card numbers to apply for a scholarship. A “demand draft” allows a thief to empty your bank account with just the account number and bank routing number from the bottom of a check.
- Do not share your Social Security Number. Scholarship providers do not need your Social Security Number, not even if you win the scholarship. Scholarship providers do not report scholarships to the IRS. Instead, the scholarship recipient is responsible for reporting the taxable portion of a scholarship on their federal income tax return.
And remember that nobody can guarantee you’ll win a scholarship, even if you pay money.
What Is Scholarship Displacement?
Scholarship displacement occurs when winning a private scholarship leads to a reduction in the college’s institutional grants. About half of scholarship recipients experience scholarship displacement.
When you win a private scholarship, it reduces your financial need, so the college may reduce your need-based financial aid package. But, colleges have some flexibility in how they reduce your financial aid package. They can choose to apply the scholarships to unmet need and they can choose to reduce loans before work and work before grants. The average unmet need, or gap, is more than $10,000 a year, leaving a lot of room to absorb the private scholarship.
Look for the college’s “Outside Scholarship Policy” on its website. This specifies how a college reduces financial aid when a student wins a private scholarship.
Even some colleges that claim to not engage in scholarship displacement will reduce their grants in subsequent years when the student receives a renewable scholarship. They take the renewable scholarship for granted. This is called “stealth displacement.”
Workarounds include asking for an adjustment to the college’s cost of attendance (e.g., to cover the actual costs of college textbooks or to cover the cost of a computer and peripherals) and deferring the scholarship to a subsequent year. Keep receipts for books, supplies and equipment and ask the college for an adjustment to the cost of attendance if your total costs exceed the allowance within the student budget.
Ask the scholarship provider for help. Scholarship providers want to know if their scholarships are being displaced. Sometimes they can negotiate with the college on your behalf or provide you with assistance in other ways.
Interestingly, six states have passed laws banning scholarship displacement.
Tips For Keeping Your Scholarship
Some scholarships are renewable, but you may have to maintain a minimum GPA, participate in community service or send periodic reports to the scholarship provider.
Winning the scholarship was the hardest part. Make sure you know what you need to do to keep your scholarship. Even if your scholarship is not renewable, send the scholarship sponsor a thank you letter that tells them how the scholarship made a difference in your life.
I recall a instance where a student wrote such a heartfelt thank you for her scholarship, that the scholarship provider was moved to turn her non-renewable scholarship into a four-year scholarship.
How Do Scholarship Taxes Work?
Scholarships are tax-free if used to pay for tuition and required fees, books, supplies and equipment. Amounts used for living expenses, such as housing, meal plans and transportation, are taxable.
Related: Rise In Taxable Scholarships
The scholarship recipient must be pursuing a degree or certificate. The scholarship must not be a fee for services provided to the college. There are exceptions for tuition waivers, comprehensive student work-learning-service programs operated by work colleges, the National Health Service Corps Scholarship Program, and the Armed Forces Health Professional Scholarships.
Some scholarship providers award scholarships through 529 college savings plans because they have a more favorable tax treatment. Qualified distributions from a 529 plan include not just tuition and textbooks, but also room and board (if the student is enrolled at least half-time), the cost of a computer (including peripherals, software and internet access) and special-needs expenses.
The impact of non-qualified distributions from a 529 plan is minimal if the scholarship provider contributed funds to the 529 plan recently, so there was no time for earnings to accumulate. The taxes on a non-qualified distribution are based on the earnings portion of the distribution. 529 plans may also be effective at bypassing scholarship displacement.
Final Thoughts
As you can see, the world of private college scholarships is complex, which is why you should always do the proper research to not only improve your chances of winning one or more scholarships, but to also avoid the potential pitfalls that can arise.
Mark Kantrowitz is an expert on student financial aid, scholarships, 529 plans, and student loans. He has been quoted in more than 10,000 newspaper and magazine articles about college admissions and financial aid. Mark has written for the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Reuters, USA Today, MarketWatch, Money Magazine, Forbes, Newsweek, and Time. You can find his work on Student Aid Policy here.
Mark is the author of five bestselling books about scholarships and financial aid and holds seven patents. Mark serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Student Financial Aid, the editorial advisory board of Bottom Line/Personal, and is a member of the board of trustees of the Center for Excellence in Education. He previously served as a member of the board of directors of the National Scholarship Providers Association. Mark has two Bachelor’s degrees in mathematics and philosophy from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and a Master’s degree in computer science from Carnegie Mellon University (CMU).
Editor: Colin Graves Reviewed by: Robert Farrington