Citizen/Eligible
Non-Citizen
You must qualify as one of the following to receive federal student aid:
· U.S.
citizen
· U.S. national (includes natives of American Somoa or Swain’s Island)
· U.S. permanent resident who has an I-151, I-551, or I-551C (Alien Registration
Receipt Card)
If
you do not fall within one of these categories, you must
possess an Arrival-Departure Record (I-94) from the U.S.
Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) signifying
one of the following designations:
· Refugee
· Asylum Granted
· Indefinite Parole and/or Humanitarian Parole
· Cuban-Haitian Entrant, Status Pending
· Conditional Entrant (valid only if issued before April 1, 1980)
· Other eligible non-citizen with a Temporary Resident Card (I-688)
Or,
you can be eligible based on the Family Unity Status
Category with approved I-797 (Voluntary Departure and
Immigrant Petition). You are also eligible for federal
student aid if you have a suspension of deportation
case pending before Congress.
If
you have only a Notice of Approval to Apply for Permanent
Residence (I-171 or I-464A), you are not eligible for
federal student aid. If you are in the U.S. on an F-1
or F-2 student visa only, or on a J-1 or J-2 exchange
visitor visa only, you cannot receive federal student
aid. Also, persons with G series visas (pertaining to
international organizations) are not eligible for federal
student aid.
NOTE: Only
citizens and non-citizen nationals can receive federal
aid for study at a foreign institution, and only Federal
Stafford Loans, Federal PLUS loans, and Federal Direct
Loans are available for that purpose.
Due
to on-going changes in U.S. immigration laws, the above
information is subject to change at any time.