In some states, more than 60 percent of high school seniors had completed the form by May 1.
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A record share of the high school Class of 2026 has completed the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, the National College Attainment Network reported Wednesday. As of May 1, 54.7 percent of graduating seniors had completed the federal aid form—up from 53.9 percent last year and 47.3 percent in 2024, when the glitchy rollout of an overhauled FAFSA created widespread delays and frustrations.
This year’s class set the record nearly two months ahead of the June 30 deadline NCAN typically uses to measure the form’s completion rate. By the end of next month, the class could potentially exceed a completion rate of 60 percent nationwide, Bill DeBaun, NCAN’s senior director of data and strategic initiatives, noted in the news release.
Six states—California, Illinois, New Jersey, New York, Tennessee and Texas—had already reached a completion rate of 60 percent or more by May 1. And every state saw more FAFSA completions in 2026 than 2025, with four states—Alaska, Arizona, Florida and New Mexico—achieving a year-over-year increase of at least 20 percent.
DeBaun pointed to several reasons for the jump. For one thing, the form opened early this year—in September instead of December, as it has the past two cycles—giving students more time to complete it. In addition, the much-hyped FAFSA simplification has finally taken root, making the form easier for families to navigate, and college counselors and other access professionals have three years’ worth of experience in guiding them. It also helps that nine states now have universal FAFSA completion policies, making completion a requirement for graduation, DeBaun noted.
“This moment is a poignant and powerful one for NCAN and our members and partners across the country,” DeBaun wrote. “Advocating for FAFSA simplification was a decade-long project, and the policy’s passage was never assured. NCAN members have been key drivers of FAFSA completion across the country for years, but that was especially true during the tumultuous 2024–25 cycle. In light of that difficult period, witnessing this turnaround is especially sweet.”
