Skip to content

Marist· Outside Scholarship Displacement

Will Marist Reduce Your Outside Scholarship?

When you win a private scholarship, who actually keeps the money: your family, or the school?

Verified Jul 202615 days ago· COWORK

The rule at Marist

Loan-first displacement

Marist displaces loans first, then work-study. In plain dollar terms, that means a $5,000 outside award shrinks the federal loan offer by $5,000 before any grant is touched.

marist.edu publishes the $76,865 cost-of-attendance worksheet the math is run against.

Source: https://www.marist.edu/documents/d/guest/student-financial-services-philosophy-policy-and-important-acknowledgements-terms-and-conditions-2-4-2025

The math: a $5,000 outside scholarship at Marist

  1. Setup

    You've received Marist's institutional merit aid plus the federal loan offer in your award letter. You win a $5,000 outside scholarship.

  2. What Marist does

    Marist reduces your loan offer first, then work-study, before touching institutional grants. The $5,000 swap is effectively cash to the family: fewer loans now, less debt at graduation.

  3. Family takeaway

    Loan-first displacement is the most family-friendly treatment. Outside scholarships translate dollar-for-dollar into reduced borrowing.

Schools with the same policy

These schools also use loan-first displacement for outside scholarships. The same dollar math above applies at each.

Schools that handle this differently

If Marist’s policy concerns you, these schools treat outside scholarships under a different rule.

Displacement questions families ask

What is the cost of attendance?
First-year resident estimated COA is $76,865 (tuition $50,760; activity fee $420; health services $520; orientation $200; housing $12,430; food $7,700; books $2,425; transportation $1,120; personal $1,200; loan fees $90). Commuter-at-home is $63,385 and off-campus is $79,385.

Aid-office script (copy & send)

The displacement rule is only binding when it's in writing. This script asks Marist's aid office the specific question that matters for loan-first displacement.

Subject: Outside-scholarship treatment question, fall applicant

Dear Marist Financial Aid Office,

I'm a fall applicant reviewing how outside scholarships interact with my institutional aid package. I've read the public policy at https://www.marist.edu/documents/d/guest/student-financial-services-philosophy-policy-and-important-acknowledgements-terms-and-conditions-2-4-2025 and the $76,865 cost-of-attendance worksheet.

If I win a $5,000 outside scholarship after the package is built, can you confirm it reduces my Direct Loan offer first, before any institutional grant is touched?

If the loan offer is smaller than the outside award, what is the next aid type that gets reduced (work-study, institutional grant, other)?

A written answer (email is fine) is important because the outside-scholarship awarding bodies want confirmation before disbursing. Thank you for the time.

— [Student name], [Application ID if available]

How Marist compares across our verified dataset

  • 145 of 750 verified schools in our dataset use loan-first displacement.

    Marist is in a recognizable cluster (145 schools share this category). That framing matters when comparing peer schools that may publish the policy differently or not at all.

  • 669 of 750 verified schools publish at least one four-year renewable merit award.

    Marist is one of them. The cohort minority (81 schools) only awards one-year scholarships, which means the four-year value families assume on a brochure quote isn't guaranteed at every school.

Sources used on this page

Every claim is checked against Marist’s own published materials. Below is the full reference set.

More on Marist merit aid