The North Star Promise will begin to offer awards in Fall 2024, and on an ongoing basis. All public Minnesota higher education institutions and Tribal Colleges will include North Star Promise funds in their financial aid packages for eligible students and families.
To apply, you must submit a completed FAFSA Form or Minnesota Dream Act application. You'll find program details, eligibility requirements, eligible colleges and universities, and other essential information on the North Star Promise page.
If you have any questions that are not answered below or on the North Star Promise page, contact us at: NorthStarPromise.OHE@state.mn.us
If you are a member of the media and have questions about the program, email OHE Director of Communications Keith Hovis: keith.hovis@state.mn.us
To apply for North Star Promise, complete the FAFSA or Minnesota Dream Act application. If you are eligible, the eligible college or university at which you are enrolled will communicate your eligibility and award information through their standard financial aid awarding process. There is no additional application.
There is not a limit on the maximum term, yearly, or lifetime dollar amount of an award you can receive. The amount of your award is based on the "last-dollar" calculation of your eligibility on a term-by-term basis. Your term award can be up to 100% of the amount charged in tuition and required fees per term, minus all other sources of gift aid you receive.
Students earning a 2-year degree can receive the award for up to 4 full-time semesters or the equivalent. Students earning a 4-year degree can receive the award for up to 8 full-time semesters or the equivalent.
Students who meet all North Star Promise eligibility requirements and also receive Pell Grant, will receive an additional award, called the North Star Promise Plus, in the amount of 15% of the Pell Grant received that term.
As a last-dollar award, this award is calculated on a term-by-term basis. If new sources of gift aid are awarded to you, North Star Promise funds will be recalculated. You must also complete the FAFSA or MN Dream Act application every year. Each year, the FAFSA and MN Dream Act applications will request updated federal tax information. It is possible that you could qualify for the program one year, and then not the next, depending upon changes in the Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) from year to year. You must continue to meet the Satisfactory Academic Progress (SAP) standards at your school.
There is no maximum length of time for which you can receive the award. However, students earning a 2-year degree can receive the award for up to 4 full-time semesters or the equivalent. Students earning a 4-year degree can receive the award for up to 8 full-time semesters or the equivalent.
The Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) comes from the Federal 1040 Income Tax Return, specifically line 11 of the form 1040. The first year of the program is the 2024-2025 academic year and the corresponding FAFSA or Minnesota dream Act application asks about prior, prior year AGI. In other words, the AGI from 2022.
Dependent students will have the AGI of their parent(s), and stepparent if applicable, considered for the program's family AGI threshold of below $80,000. The AGI of dependent students will not be considered. When parents are divorced, separated or never married, and do not live together, the parent who provides more financial support to the student should be the parent of record for the FAFSA or Minnesota Dream Act. This is the parent whose income will be reviewed when determining eligibility for North Star Promise. If the parent who provides more financial support has remarried as of the date the FAFSA or Minnesota Dream Act is filed, the stepparent's AGI will also be taken into account when determining eligibility.
Independent students will have the AGI of the student considered for program eligibility. If the student is married, the student and spouse's combined AGI must be below $80,000 in order to be eligible for North Star Promise funds.
You can review what makes a student either dependent or independent here.
When parents are divorced, separated or never married, and do not live together, only one parent must complete the FAFSA/Minnesota Dream Act application.
For 2024-2025, the first year of North Star Promise, this will be the parent who provides more financial support to the student. Starting in the 2024-2025 academic year, the FAFSA/Minnesota Dream Act will no longer take into account which household the student lived with most. If the parent who provides more financial support has remarried as of the date the FAFSA/Minnesota Dream Act is filed, the stepparent's income, assets and dependents must also be reported.
Dependent students will have the AGI of their parent(s), and stepparent if applicable, considered for the program's family AGI threshold of below $80,000. The AGI of dependent students will not be considered.
State financial aid programs, including the North Star Promise, follow the federal definitions for what makes a student independent or dependent in terms of financial aid. You can review what makes a student either dependent or independent here.
If you are considered dependent for FAFSA purposes, then you will need to include parent tax information on the FAFSA. Dependent students will have the AGI of their parent(s), and stepparent if applicable, considered for the program's family AGI threshold of below $80,000. The AGI of dependent students will not be considered.
If you are considered independent for FAFSA purposes, then you are not required to include parent tax information on the FAFSA. Independent students will have the AGI of the student considered for program eligibility. If the student is married, the student and spouse's combined AGI must be below $80,000 in order to be eligible for North Star Promise funds.
The program criteria of a family adjusted gross income below $80,000 is set in statutory law based on the median family income in the state of Minnesota. Unfortunately, there is not a gradually reducing benefit for those over the threshold.
However, if a family has experienced a change in income, that can be considered by the financial aid office where the student enrolls. For example, the 2024-2025 financial aid application asks about income from 2022. If a family experiences a change in income, sometimes called a special circumstance, the family can ask the financial aid office for a professional judgement to consider more current income, rather than income from 2022. Also, while North Star Promise does not have a reduced benefit or award for AGIs over the threshold, you may qualify for other federal, state or school-based financial aid that can help cover expenses and should still complete either the FAFSA or Minnesota Dream Act Application.
No, assets and/or investments are not considered when determining eligibility for North Star Promise.