If you havenāt been living under a rock, then you know that paying for a college degree these days isn’t easy. Tuition costs have climbed year after year, as have pretty much all of the indirect costs associated with being a student (like books, housing, and travel). And with more college applicants than ever before, the competition for available scholarships is fierce. All in all, itās tough to make ends meet while financing a college experience.
But here’s what too many families misunderstand: your college funding plan and your college admissions plan aren’t really two separate things. They’re the same thing. A strong college profile will set you up for financial rewards, as well.
So donāt try to put it all off for later. Realistically, the work you put into building a strong application today directly shapes how much help you could be offered tomorrow. Getting in is only the beginning.
First things first.
Naturally, not all scholarship money is the same. There are three main types of financial scholarships youāll encounter:
- Need-based aid, which is awarded based on your familyās financial circumstances.
- Institutional merit aid, which is primarily based on your scholastic achievements.
- External scholarships (from private or national programs), which are awarded based on individual contest rules.
That said, most external scholarships are highly competitive and relatively small; institutional aid from colleges often makes up the majority of financial support. While you canāt change your familyās economic status on a whim, you can make sure youāre informed and prepared about whatās coming. And, you can control your academic and extracurricular performance to potentially earn more aid from different sources.
In other words? There are plenty of factors that are still under your control. Thatās what weāll focus on today.

Admissions strategy and your college funding plan:
There are a few ways that college applications are a lot like scholarships, and vice versa. So letās take a closer look at the ways these two realms overlap.
1. Youāll want to start early, and cast a wide net.
Much like college research, one of the most important things you can do for your bottom line is simply to start early. Not the week before deadlines, and not junior year when everything feels urgent. But now, whatever grade you’re in. Yes, now!
Why?
First, it gives you time to genuinely build your profile: developing meaningful extracurriculars, strengthening your academics, and figuring out what you might want to study. Think about it: the students who win the most scholarships in broad national competitions aren’t the ones who scrambled at the last minute. They’re the ones who gave themselves time to put together a narrative worth noticing with a thoughtful resume and transcript choices over time.
Second, getting a head start is crucial when it comes to filing. In your senior year, submitting your applications early (the Free Application for Federal Student Aid and/or the CSS Profile) can make a real difference in the total amount of assistance you receive. Many schools award need-based aid on a first-come, first-served basis, so the earlier you file, the higher your chances of accessing funds that reflect your family’s demonstrated financial need.
2. A stronger application means more merit aid.
Even if your family doesn’t qualify for need-based aid, don’t assume scholarships aren’t within reach just yet. Most colleges use merit scholarships to attract high-achieving students. This is where your admissions strategy pays off in a very direct way: the stronger your application, the better your merit scholarship chances at each individual school.
Quick clarification: These awards arenāt awarded based on how strong you are in general; they are based on how strong you are relative to that schoolās applicant pool. So “high-achieving” means different things at different schools. A student who might be an average applicant at one university could be a standout recruit at another. When it comes to scholarship consideration, being above average for a school may be better than being average at a more selective one.
That’s why being strategic about where you apply matters just as much as how you apply. For some students, building the right college list can make all the difference. Including schools where you fall in the top 25% of applicants academically increases your chances of receiving significant merit aid. When you target schools where your stats and strengths genuinely shine, you become exactly the kind of student those schools want to incentivize with merit money.
To illustrate, here are a few of the ways that the thought you put into building your college list can pay off later (or not):
This applies to tests, too.
Even if a school is test-optional for admission, that doesn’t always mean your SAT or ACT scores are irrelevant. Some colleges will use test scores separately when determining merit scholarship eligibility. That means a strong score could unlock a higher award tier, even if submitting it wasn’t required to get in. Some schools are transparent about this in their scholarship criteria; others aren’t. It’s worth doing a little digging on each school’s policy, and in many cases, it’s worth taking the test seriously even if you plan to apply test-optional. A score that doesn’t help your admission chances might still help your financial ones.
Your essays, your activities, your recommendations, your grades and test scores⦠All of it contributes to a picture of who you are and what you’ll bring to a campus. The more compelling that picture, the more likely a school is to make it worth your while to choose them.
3. Your application materials can become your scholarship portfolio.
Here’s a piece of good news that doesn’t get talked about enough: the hard work you put into your college applications doesn’t expire when you hit submit. Your great personal story, the essays you worked so hard on, and your awesome descriptions of the leadership and service you did in high school? Those same materials are the building blocks for every scholarship application that comes after.
Think about it. Most scholarship applications ask for some version of the same things. They might ask you to ātell us about yourself,ā āexplain your goals,ā or maybe ādescribe a challenge you’ve overcome or a community you’ve contributed to.ā Do these questions sound familiar? If you’ve written a strong college essay and thoughtful activity descriptions, you already have the raw material. You’re not starting from scratch; you’re refining and adapting the content you’ve already invested in.
This is one of the most underappreciated advantages of treating your college application seriously. Strong college application materials don’t just open doors to admission. If you do it right, they become a toolkit you can reach for again and again throughout your scholarship search.

You are in control of your bottom line.
Getting into college is an accomplishment worth celebrating. Full stop. But it’s not the finish line in this journey: it’s your starting gate. Now is not the time to rest on your laurels. The families who come out ahead financially are the ones who understood early on that admissions strategy and scholarship strategy are one and the same.
Start early, build a real application, and use every piece of it to your advantage. The payoff isn’t just getting in. It’s graduating without the weight of debt that didn’t have to be there.
Consult with an expert.
We want to help you thrive! For more information and advice on the scholarship search ā or any part of the college admission process, really ā Empowerly can help. These experienced college counselors have been in your shoes. Not only that, theyāve done the research on all the options available to students in 2026.
If youāre building a college plan (and college funding plan, of course!) from scratch, an expert sounding board might be just what you need to move forward with confidence. Book a free consultation with a team member to learn more about our services and how we can help you secure your dream future.