For more information visit: emergency.wvu.edu
During the summer semester, students eligible for the Pell Grant may receive up to 150% of their scheduled offer each year. If a student is eligible for the Pell during the fall and/or spring semesters, they may qualify for Pell Grant for summer as well!
Jane, a Pell eligible student, was enrolled full-time during fall and full-time during spring, so she received $2500 for fall and $2500 for spring in Pell Grant. Under the 150% eligibility, Jane could receive up to another $2500 for summer (depending on enrollment). If she enrolls full-time in degree-pursuant courses, she could receive the full $2500. If she enrolls half-time in degree-pursuant courses, she could receive half of that amount ($1250).
To be eligible for summer Pell, students must:
Subhead goes here.
Pell Grant eligibility is based in part on the courses in which students begin attendance. Prior to the first course a student attends for a semester, eligibility could also be impacted by:
Pell Grant eligibility for the semester will be calculated based on the classes the student has begun attending by the first add/drop date that applies to the student’s enrollment. After this add/drop period, the Pell Grant may be reduced if a student does not begin attendance in their registered coursework, partially withdraws from coursework, or fully withdraws from the semester.
Enrollment intensity is the percentage of full-time enrollment in degree-pursuant courses at the time of disbursement that a student is enrolled in. For example, full-time enrollment for financial aid purposes is based on 12 credit hours. If a student is enrolled in 6 degree-pursuant credit hours, the enrollment intensity would be 6 divided by 12 x 100% = 50%.
The Pell Grant amount can be impacted if enrollment changes, even if the enrollment changes after the grant disburses.
| Degree-Pursuant Credit Hours | Enrollment Intensity | Enrollment Status Equivalent |
|---|---|---|
| 12 (or more) | 100% | Full-Time |
| 11 | 92% | Three-Quarter Time |
| 10 | 83% | Three-Quarter Time |
| 9 | 75% | Three-Quarter Time |
| 8 | 67% | Half-Time |
| 7 | 58% | Half-Time |
| 6 | 50% | Half-Time |
| 5 | 42% | Less-than-Half-Time |
| 4 | 33% | Less-than-Half-Time |
| 3 | 25% | Less-than-Half-Time |
| 2 | 17% | Less-than-Half-Time |
| 1 | 8% | Less-than-Half-Time |
Put additional info or links here.
The maximum amount of time a student can receive the Federal Pell Grant (prior to achieving a bachelor's degree) is known as their "Lifetime Eligibility." Students can receive the grant for up to the equivalent of twelve full-time semesters. Receiving Pell for attending one semester at full-time status means a student uses 50% of their Pell Lifetime Eligibility. Twelve full-time semesters equal a 600% maximum. If a student attends half-time, then that utilizes 25% of their 600% eligibility.
Students can monitor their lifetime eligibility used by logging in to the Federal Student Aid website using their Federal Student Aid ID (FSA ID). This is the same username and password students use to submit the FAFSA. Students can review how much of their overall Pell eligibility they have used - their "lifetime eligibility" - after they log in to the Federal Student Aid website by looking at the "MyAid" section of the Dashboard, clicking on View Details, then clicking on the "Grants" tab.
If you do not complete the classes that you are registered for during summer, you may owe money back for all or part of your Federal Pell Grant if it has disbursed. Financial aid is disbursed in good faith based on anticipated completion of the courses. If students do not earn credits for those courses due to dropping, withdrawing, or failing, they may have to repay aid funds. The amount that must be returned will be calculated based on the drop date, the number of credits, and the last day that you attended class.