Ripoff Report Needs Your Help!
X  |  CLOSE
Report: #237183

Complaint Review: Student Financial Aid Services - Davis California

  • Submitted:
  • Updated:
  • Reported By: East Moline Illinois
  • Author Confirmed What's this?
  • Why?
  • Student Financial Aid Services 417 Mace Blvd. Suite J338 Davis, California U.S.A.

fafsa.com/Student Financial Aid Services Charing people about $80 to file a free FAFSA report Davis California

*Consumer Comment: Not a scam... but darn close.

*Consumer Comment: Not a scam

Show customers why they should trust your business over your competitors...

Is this
Report about YOU
listed on other sites?
Those sites steal
Ripoff Report's
content.
We can get those
removed for you!
Find out more here.
How to fix
Ripoff Report
If your business is
willing to make a
commitment to
customer satisfaction
Click here now..

I went to http://www.fafsa.com/ and was going to fill out my FAFSA report for this uncoming school year, and then it was asking me my information and telling me that I could give them all of this information over the phone. Why would anyone want to pay these kinds of fees:

Application Type School Years Price
New or first-time 1 $79.99
New or first-time 2 $99.99
New or first-time Until college graduation
(one flat fee) $189.99
Renewal 1 $49.99
Renewal 2 $79.99
Renewal Until college graduation
(one flat fee) $139.99

to file a free form that is available and LEGAL through the US Department of Education. This is truely a masterful rip-off, and I want to expose this organization for who they are. If you want to file your FAFSA the correct and FREE way, go to http://www.fafsa.ed.gov/. Thank you.

Tony
East Moline, Illinois
U.S.A.

This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 02/27/2007 10:29 AM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/student-financial-aid-services/davis-california-95616/fafsacomstudent-financial-aid-services-charing-people-about-80-to-file-a-free-fafsa-rep-237183. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content

Search for additional reports

If you would like to see more Rip-off Reports on this company/individual, search here:

Report & Rebuttal
Respond to this report!
What's this?
Also a victim?
What's this?
Repair Your Reputation!
What's this?

Updates & Rebuttals

REBUTTALS & REPLIES:
0Author
2Consumer
0Employee/Owner

#2 Consumer Comment

Not a scam... but darn close.

AUTHOR: jobeibi - (United States of America)

POSTED: Monday, March 01, 2010

My daughter also started her FAFSA process on FAFSA.com instead of FAFSA.gov.  While I accept that it is not a scam in the purest sense, I feel that it is misleading, and people should be aware of this company before they spend their hours on the wrong site. 

FAFSA is a free application.  Many people look for it by typing FAFSA into their search engine, and because FAFSA.com pays the search engine companies, their link tends to be at the top of the search results page.  The tagline under the link says "Complete Your FAFSA Now for Federal Student Aid. By Phone or Online."  It does not mention that this is a private company. AFter clicking on the link, the inattentive user will miss the statement at the top of the main page stating that the site is not affiliated with the Dept of Education.  This statement is repeated in the small print on the botton of the application pages.

Two students I know who stumbled onto FAFSA.com spent more than two hours each on the web site, filling out the application.  They put in their own social security numbers, as well as their parents', and all of their parents' personal finance information.  It was a frustrating process for students and parents alike, and when these students finally got to the end of the application, they were each met with the statement that something was "wrong" and that they could only find out what was wrong if they paid the fee. 

Each student, upon realizing what had happened, then went to the FAFSA.ed.gov web site to file their applications.  The process there was simpler and quicker, and less frustrating. 

It seems to me that the .com site deliberately creates frustration so that when something is "wrong" at the end of the application, families will give in and pay anything just to turn the process over to someone else.  After all, they've already put in two hours.  Why would they want to do all that over again? I'm not even sure that the "something wrong" at the end is legitimate.  Was the application complete? Did they deliberately neglect to include a question so that we would have to get assistance? I just don't know.

Comparisons to the Free Tax Prep websites are invalid, in my opinion.  When I do my taxes at hrblock.com, they don't tell me something is wrong and then demand payment to fix it.  They tell me what information I am missing so that I can complete my 1040 without a hitch... for free. 

 

Respond to this report!
What's this?

#1 Consumer Comment

Not a scam

AUTHOR: Anonymous - (U.S.A.)

POSTED: Tuesday, February 27, 2007

FAFSA is indeed a free application for federal student aid, however if lengthy applications are burdensome or inconvenient for an applicant, there are services available from private comapanies / individuals to assist in the process.

This is no different than someone using a tax preparer to assist in filing what is an otherwise free tax return, and certainly is not a "masterful rip-off". It's just smart marketing. In fact, it's the sort of marketing taught by the very schools that people are taking out loans to attend. Very circular.

Respond to this report!
What's this?
Featured Reports

Advertisers above have met our
strict standards for business conduct.

X
What do hackers,
questionable attorneys and
fake court orders have in common?
...Dishonest Reputation Management Investigates Reputation Repair
Free speech rights compromised

WATCH News
Segment Now