Comparative Context with Peer Institutions
Harvard’s thresholds align with recent expansions at peer schools but include unique features:
Application Process and Verification
• Documentation: Families must submit tax returns, W-2 forms, and asset statements.
• Verification: Harvard’s financial aid office conducts audits for 15% of applicants to ensure accuracy.
Limitations and Exclusions
• Non-eligible costs: Study-abroad program fees, optional campus events, and graduate school expenses.
• Income fluctuations: Families experiencing sudden income drops (e.g., job loss) can request mid-year reassessments.
Conclusion
Harvard’s 2025 aid program prioritizes middle-income accessibility while retaining support for lower-income students. By excluding home equity and offering tiered grants, the policy aims to diversify enrollment demographics amid declining racial diversity post-affirmative action. However, critics note that the $3,500 student contribution and work-study requirements may still disadvantage low-income applicants compared to peer institutions like MIT. The true test of equity will emerge in enrollment data over the next decade, particularly for Pell Grant recipients, who currently represent only 12% of Harvard undergraduates
N A PUBLIC ANNOUNCEMENT that Harvard College would increase financial aid to match peers’ augmented offerings, and a private conversation reviewing the status of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences (FAS) as it confronts more straitened finances, Dean Hopi Hoestra has established priorities for an increasingly uncertain but more austere future.
Financial Aid: Catching Up with the Competition
UNDERGRADUATE FINANCIAL AID is being expanded and redefined in three ways, according to the announcement by President Alan M. Garber and Hoekstra this morning:
•Students whose family income is $100,000 and below will attend Harvard College free of charge—an increase from the prior income threshold of $85,000.
•Students whose family income is $200,000 and below will be granted “free tuition plus”: their financial aid will cover the full cost of tuition ($56,550 of the 2024-2025 term bill) and they will be evaluated individually for further aid to cover other billed expenses such as room, board, and fees (respectively, $12,922; $8,268; and $5,126).
•For students whose family income exceeds $200,000, “tailored financial aid” will be extended depending on Harvard’s evaluation of individual circumstances.
These enhancements apply to the entire enrolled College cohort, not just members of the class of 2029 who matriculate in August. According to the announcement, 55 percent of undergraduates receive financial aid; they and their families paid an average of $15,700 during the 2023-2024 academic year, when the term bill was $79,450.