Qualifying for a Business Grant Can Be Easier Than You Think
February 27, 2009 by Tips for Finding Grants
Filed under About Grants
These business grants are given to new business owners, future business owners and existing business owners. Now you can open your own business now with over 80 sources of Federal business grants. There are many different types of business grants such as: Free Government Money for Women to start their own business, Free Government Money for Minorities to start their own businesses, Obtain Free Government Money for equipment, rent, offices, expenses and overhead. You can use this money to give yourself a salary as you begin your new journey. You must remember that this is Free Government Money and NEVER has to be paid back. It is the best way for business owners and wannabes to get the money that they need.
If you are looking for funding for an existing or new for profit business, you might encounter difficulties in finding and getting grant funding. Government grants are generally (though not always) given to non-profit organizations for programs and services that benefit the community or the public at large. Don’t be discouraged though because there are many grants that are given to for profit businesses as well. If you want to know if your business or business idea is eligible for a grant, visit the government’s business grant website at www.firstgov.gov
Some of the businesses that are eligible for a grant are: non-profits, self help business groups, anything to do with the arts like publishers or galleries, magazines etc. and businesses that are hoping to be the sole provider in a specific locale. You can also get business start up money if you are able to give an outstanding proposal. Sometimes the government grants will be given to people with a great proposal even if they are not necessarily regulated under the arts or beneficial to the community at large. You just need to WOW them in the application process.
Thanks to Abbas Abedi for contributing this article to our Grants blog:
Happy New Year, Class of ‘10! and Welcome to Your College Financial Aid Base Year
February 27, 2009 by Tips for Finding Grants
Filed under About Grants
As they were ringing in the New Year on January 1, high school juniors and their parents were also ringing in their college financial aid “base year.” Although the actions taken in the base year can mean the difference between saving thousands on college expenses and needlessly overspending, few people understand what they need to do to achieve the former rather than suffer the latter. So, let’s take a closer look.
If you are like the vast majority of American’s in our sagging economy, your family will be looking for additional funds to help cover the cost of a college education. The largest share of this need-based supplemental money comes from the federal government through its financial aid system.
But the government also assumes that you are able to participate in the expense of educating your child prior to considering how and to what level they will participate in funding your child’s education. Therefore, in order to determine your initial level of participation, families are required to fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA form.
The FAFSA captures the required financial information used to calculate how much your family is expected to pay via a formula known as the Federal Methodology (FM). Your initial or beginning monetary participation level is known as your Expected Family Contribution (EFC).
The data used to generate the initial EFC calculation is collected beginning in January of your child’s junior year in high school and ends on December 31 of that same year, which would be his or her senior year in high school. This time frame is referred to as your “base year.”
In essence, if you’re in your base year, you are now under the financial aid microscope and any financial moves being considered (including the sale of real estate or stocks, withdrawals from IRAs, contributions to retirement plans, receiving monetary gifts, etc.) must be weighed not only from a federal tax standpoint but also in relation to the financial aid system. The catch is that what makes sense from a 1040 point of view may have adverse consequences on your chances of receiving financial aid.
Case in point: Consider contributions made to your 401(K) plan at work during your child’s base year or any year prior to financial aid application. In order to encourage individuals saving for retirement, the federal government does not tax contributions made to 401(K) plans up to a specified annual limit. This money enters the retirement plan on a pre-tax basis with taxes being accounted for as money is withdrawn to supplement retirement.
The Federal Methodology used to calculate your EFC treats these contributions from an entirely different prospective. The financial aid system believes that you can stop contributing towards retirement and apply these contributions to college expenses. They anticipate you playing “catch up” with these contributions after your child is out of school.
Accordingly, your pre-tax retirement contributions, which are not considered taxable 1040 income, are considered “untaxed income” by the financial aid system and are added back into the EFC calculation and assessed at the applicable rate.
If we assume an assessment rate of 30 percent and $10,000 of retirement contributions, your initial EFC just increased by $3,000 for the year in which federal aid is applied for. This could very well eliminate you from being considered for preferred financial aid.
This is not to suggest that you discontinue your retirement contributions. However, the harsh reality of the situation is that the enormity of funding your child’s college education and your retirement collide with each other at an inopportune time, especially as our national economy struggles. As you make decisions regarding college education versus retirement funding, you should carefully weigh how each decision will impact your wallet, both during the base year and well into the future.
Understanding the pros and cons of any financial moves made during your base year - or any year in which financial aid is applied for - from both a tax and financial aid standpoint goes a long way toward determining what you pay for college. The process is complicated and should only be done in consultation with a qualified professional.
Thanks to Marc Hill for contributing this article to our Grants blog:
Marc R. Hill is a financial planner who coaches and educates families on how to dramatically reduce their college costs up to $12K or more! Now you can learn how to cut your family’s college costs and protect your retirement account with Hill’s FREE e-newsletter: “College Savings Tip Sheet.” Subscribe now for free at http://www.reduceyourcollegecosts.info & receive two FREE issues of Hill’s members-only newsletter
“Affording College.”
There are 3 of us in college in our family. How can I find a foundation that gives grants not based on grades?
February 27, 2009 by Tips for Finding Grants
Filed under Foundations & Scholarships
Our mother is a disabled RN so our parents have a lot of medical bills. Any guidance would be appreciated. Thanks!
Grants For Home Repair
Do I get to keep extra college grant money?
February 26, 2009 by Tips for Finding Grants
Filed under More Grants Answers
I’ve been awarded a Pell Grant for one semester for tuition at a Texas school. Once the tuition is paid, will I be allowed to keep the remaining amount? What happens to the remaining amount?
College Grants For Single Mothers
How can I find out if the Rubin Family Charitable Foundation is a “Type III Supporting Organization” per IRS?
February 26, 2009 by Tips for Finding Grants
Filed under Foundations & Scholarships
I’m researching two charitable foundations that are major investors in a casino proposed for Philadelphia. It seems disproportionate to give a charitable foundation so much ownership unless there is a tax benefit back story. The “Type III Supporting Organization” per IRS designation of a type of charitable foundation is a category that is abused to the point where the IRS would like it reformed.
Small Business Grants For Women









