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Nevada State· Outside Scholarship Displacement

Will Nevada State Reduce Your Outside Scholarship?

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

Verified Jun 20268 days ago· COWORK

The rule at Nevada State

Cost-of-attendance cap

Nevada State only displaces institutional aid when the package would exceed COA. In plain dollar terms, that means an outside award only starts cutting institutional grant once the total package exceeds the COA worksheet.

nevadastate.edu lists Scorpion Academic Scholarship — First-Year/Freshmen (2026 HS Graduates) as the baseline automatic award that any outside scholarship will sit on top of.

Source: https://nevadastate.edu/admissions/scholarships/

The math: a $5,000 outside scholarship at Nevada State

  1. Setup

    Suppose you've stacked Nevada State's institutional merit + housing scholarship to a combined value within ~$5,000 of cost of attendance. You then win a $5,000 outside scholarship.

  2. What Nevada State does

    Because total aid would exceed cost of attendance, Nevada State reduces its institutional contribution by the amount that pushes you over. The outside award fills the cap, not the family wallet.

  3. Family takeaway

    For the highest-merit students at COA-cap schools, outside scholarships can mathematically displace institutional aid once the package is near full-COA. Run the cap math before applying.

Schools with the same policy

These schools also use cost-of-attendance cap for outside scholarships. The same dollar math above applies at each.

Schools that handle this differently

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

When this rule bites hardest

  • Ignoring the all-sources cost-of-attendance cap

    Combined financial aid from all sources cannot exceed your Cost of Attendance, so outside scholarships count toward that ceiling.

Aid-office script (copy & send)

The displacement rule is only binding when it's in writing. This script asks Nevada State's aid office the specific question that matters for cost-of-attendance cap.

Subject: Outside-scholarship treatment question, fall applicant

Dear Nevada State 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://nevadastate.edu/admissions/scholarships/.

If my package is institutional merit + Pell + a $5,000 outside scholarship and the total stays under the COA worksheet, can you confirm no institutional dollar is reduced?

If the same outside award pushes the total over COA by $X, which aid line item shrinks first: institutional grant, loan, or work-study?

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 Nevada State compares across our verified dataset

  • 160 of 751 verified schools in our dataset use cost-of-attendance cap displacement.

    Nevada State is in a recognizable cluster (160 schools share this category). That framing matters when comparing peer schools that may publish the policy differently or not at all.

  • 669 of 751 verified schools publish at least one four-year renewable merit award.

    Nevada State is one of them. The cohort minority (82 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 Nevada State’s own published materials. Below is the full reference set.

More on Nevada State merit aid