HR-6502-119
Placed on the Union Calendar, Calendar No. 394.
Sponsored by Lisa McClain (R-MI)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Education to develop a standardized, consumer-tested format for college financial aid offer letters. All institutions of higher education that participate in federal student aid programs would be required to use this format for every aid offer — whether delivered on paper, mobile, or electronically. The format would include specific disclosures about cost of attendance, net price, loan interest rates, student employment opportunities, and instructions for accepting, adjusting, or declining aid.
Who benefits
Prospective college students and their families, particularly first-generation college students and low-income students who may lack experience interpreting financial aid offers. Students comparing aid packages across multiple schools would benefit from standardized terminology. Consumer advocacy organizations that have long pushed for aid letter transparency. High school counselors and college access nonprofits who help students navigate financial aid. Taxpayers broadly, if clearer disclosures reduce overborrowing and subsequent loan defaults.
Who is hurt
Colleges and universities that would bear administrative and technology costs to redesign their financial aid systems and communications to meet the new federal format. Smaller institutions with limited IT infrastructure may face disproportionately higher compliance costs. Third-party financial aid software vendors whose existing products may require significant updates. Institutions that currently use customized aid offer formats they believe are more effective for their student populations would lose that flexibility.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current financial aid system is deeply inconsistent — a 2019 Government Accountability Office study found that aid offers from different schools use conflicting terminology, sometimes labeling loans as "awards" in ways that obscure their true cost. They contend that a standardized, consumer-tested format would allow students to make genuine apples-to-apples comparisons across schools, reducing uninformed borrowing and the student debt burden that follows. Supporters further argue that because the federal government already funds the student aid system, requiring clear disclosure of how those funds are structured is a reasonable and proportionate condition.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that a one-size-fits-all federal format cannot adequately reflect the diversity of institutional aid structures — community colleges, large research universities, and small private colleges serve very different student populations with different financial profiles. They contend that mandating a rigid format through federal regulation risks oversimplifying complex aid packages and may actually reduce the quality of information students receive. Opponents further argue that the compliance burden — particularly for smaller institutions — could divert resources away from direct student services, and that states and accreditors are better positioned than the federal government to set disclosure standards for their institutions.