The answer to this question depends on your dependency status. If you’re considered an independent student, meaning you’ve answered YES to at least one dependency question on the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA), you’ll report your own information (and your spouse’s, if married).
If you’re a dependent student for FAFSA purposes, you’ll need to provide information about your legal parent(s) on the application. A legal parent is your biological or adoptive parent, or your legal parent as determined by the state (for example, if the parent is listed on your birth certificate). If you have a stepparent currently married to your legal parent, you generally also must provide information about him or her.
If you need to report parental information, here are some guidelines to follow:
- If your legal parents are married to each other, include information for both of them on your FAFSA.
- If your legal parents (biological and/or adoptive parents) are not married to each other and live together, include information for both.
- If your legal parent is widowed or was never married, include information only for your legal parent.
- If your parents are divorced or separated and don’t live together:
- Include the information about the parent you lived with most over the last 12 months. Also provide information for the stepparent, if your parent has remarried.
- If you lived with each parent for an equal amount of time, include information for the parent who provided you the most financial support over the last 12 months, or during the most recent 12 months that you received support from your parent(s). Also provide information for your stepparent, if your parent has remarried
- If your parents are divorced but are still living together:
- Report their status as ‘Unmarried and both legal parents living together’
- Include information for both parents
- If your parents are separated but are still living together:
- Report their status as ‘Married or remarried’ (not ‘Divorced or separated’)
- Include information for both parents
One exception to note: The FAFSA will ask about your parents’ education level. Please answer the questions about the education levels of your birth or adoptive parents. A stepparent is not classified as a parent for those questions.
Be sure to check out UCanGo2’s Dependency Questionnaire for more information.