2. Be poor on January 1st. Pay all your bills the last week of December so that you can honestly say that you have less. What you have on January 1st matters.
wait, WHAT? Can you explain that? What if I have a lot in my account on Jan 1 and then on Jan 2 , I used it to pay for something? Can I file in Feb and use Feb 1 as the amount?
You have to report how much you have in your accounts. If you pay all your bills, THEN tell how much you have left, you'll look a little more poor. If that money is never in your accounts in 2013, you don't have to report that it's yours.
Of course, they'll still know that you earned X amount, so this isn't a big-deal hint that's going to take you from 0 to a full-tuition grant. It's more of a small hint that could make a difference if you were on the edge of qualifying for something -- there's some point at which you begin to qualify, there's some point at which you qualify for another $500. IF you happen to be right on the edge, having paid your VISA bill on December 31st instead of January 10th, when it's actually due, could be your personal tipping point.
This is our situation, and I wasn't surprised at my EFC. Did none of you run the estimators ahead of time? DS has scholarships to two different schools (one private, one public) $25K/$48 and $22K/$46. One of those schools is offering $1K just for doing the FAFSA the first week of January! He'll probably pick up a couple more private scholarships before this is over, so I expect I'll be paying around $20K per year...which isn't that far off from what the EFC said in the first place. It can't be higher, so anything less is gravy.
No, I wasn't
surprised at our EFC, but it goes back to what Crisi said: You try to convince yourself, "Surely this can't be right. It's gotta be easier than this." Seeing it in black and white, knowing that the bill is coming in a few weeks . . . makes it more real.