• Tuition and Fees
    • BACK
      • Financial Aid
      • General information
      • Estimated Cost of Attendance
      • Accounting and Business Services
      • Tuition calculator
      • General and special fees
      • Refunds
      • Bookstore voucher
  • Scholarships
  • Paying for College
    • BACK
      • Getting Started
      • Types of Aid
      • Disbursement Process
      • Manage Your Federal Student Loans
      • Summer Session
      • Textbook Resources
      • Veterans Benefits
  • About My Aid
    • BACK
      • Understanding my aid
      • Financial literacy
      • Frequently Asked Questions
      • Signs of Student Loan Fraud
      • Managing my aid
      • Course Participation
      • Eligibility
      • Important Dates and Deadlines
      • Satisfactory Academic Progress
      • Student Rights & Responsibilities
  • Parents & Families
    • BACK
      • General Information
  • Special Programs
    • BACK
      • Degree Partnership Program
      • National Student Exchange (NSE)
      • Study Abroad Aid
      • Western Undergraduate Exchange (WUE)
  • Staff

  • Portal
  • Academics
  • Current Students
  • Employees
  • Give
  • Maps
  • Admission:
    • BACK
    • Admission
    • Apply
    • Get Info
    • Visit Us
Western Oregon University
search
  • Admission
  • Cost
  • Academics
  • Life at WOU
  • Athletics
  • Give
  • Portal
  • search

Financial Aid

Home » Paying for College » Types of Aid

Menu
  • Tuition and Fees
    • Back
      • Financial Aid
      • General information
      • Estimated Cost of Attendance
      • Accounting and Business Services
      • Tuition calculator
      • General and special fees
      • Refunds
      • Bookstore voucher
  • Scholarships
  • Paying for College
    • Back
      • Getting Started
      • Types of Aid
      • Disbursement Process
      • Manage Your Federal Student Loans
      • Summer Session
      • Textbook Resources
      • Veterans Benefits
  • About My Aid
    • Back
      • Understanding my aid
      • Financial literacy
      • Frequently Asked Questions
      • Signs of Student Loan Fraud
      • Managing my aid
      • Course Participation
      • Eligibility
      • Important Dates and Deadlines
      • Satisfactory Academic Progress
      • Student Rights & Responsibilities
  • Parents & Families
    • Back
      • General Information
  • Special Programs
    • Back
      • Degree Partnership Program
      • National Student Exchange (NSE)
      • Study Abroad Aid
      • Western Undergraduate Exchange (WUE)
  • Staff

Types of Aid

Paying for college

  • Getting started
  • Types of Aid
  • Disbursement process
  • Manage your federal student loans
  • Summer term
  • Textbook resources
  • Veterans benefits

Types of Aid

Federal and State Grants

Financial aid, often based on financial need, that does not need to be repaid.

(Unless, for example, you withdraw from school and owe a refund.)

 

Federal Pell Grant

The Federal Pell Grant is usually awarded only to undergraduate students who have not earned a bachelor’s or a professional degree. Amounts can change yearly. For the 2025–26 award year, the maximum award is $7,395 The amount you get, though, will depend on

  • your financial need,
  • your cost of attendance,
  • your status as a full-time or part-time student, and
  • your plans to attend school for a full academic year or less.

You MAY NOT receive Federal Pell Grant funds from more than one school at a time.

For less than full-time enrollment, awards will be prorated based on enrollment intensity as follows:

Credit Hours Enrollment Category (Old) Enrollment Intensity (New)
12 (or more) Full-Time 100%
11 Three-Quarter Time 92%
10 83%
9 75%
8 Half-Time 67%
7 58%
6 50%
5 Less-than-Half-Time 42%
4 33%
3 25%
2 17%
1 8%

Western Oregon University offers a bachelor’s degree in education; therefore, post-baccalaureate students are ineligible to receive a Federal Pell Grant.

Oregon Opportunity Grant (OOG)

Submit your 2025-2026 FAFSA/ORSAA to be considered for the OOG. Amounts and cutoff dates to be determined by the Oregon Office of Student Access and Completion (OSAC). The 2025-2026 amounts will be known after the State has completed the budget approval process later in spring 2025. Award letters will initially be processed without the OOG award and then added after we have the amounts from OSAC.

The Oregon Opportunity Grant (OOG) is Oregon’s largest state-funded need-based grant program for students planning to go to college. Opportunity Grants are funded primarily by Oregon taxpayers. Nearly 40,000 students receive Opportunity Grants each year. OSAC’s cutoff for the FAFSA/ORSAA application is August 1, 2024 for the 2024-2025 award year.

Oregon Opportunity Grant Award Amounts – 2024-2025

Student Aid Index (SAI) 4- Year Institutions Award Amount FT Award Per Term HT Award Per Term
-1,500-0 $7,524 $2,508 $1,254
1-1,000 $7,008 $2,336 $1,168
1,001-2,000 $6,204 $2,068 $1,034
2,001-3,000 $5,496 $1,832 $916
3,001-4,000 $4,416 $1,472 $736
4,001-5,000 $3,612 $1,204 $602
5,001-6,000 $2,436 $812 $406
6,001-8,000 $1,788 $596 $298

 

Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant (FSEOG)

The Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grant (FSEOG) is awarded to students with the greatest financial need and who meet WOU’s priority deadline. Students must be Pell Grant eligible to qualify for this grant. To get an FSEOG, you must fill out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA®) so we can determine your financial need. The FSEOG does not need to be repaid.

  •  Must be enrolled at least 1/2 time to receive this award.

Federal TEACH Grant

The Federal TEACH Grant is available to WOU education and pre-education majors. The grant amount is up to $4000* annually and is not based on financial need.

  • 2025-2026 TEACH Grant funding amount is pending federal determination.
  • For any 2024-25 TEACH Grant first disbursed on or after Oct. 1, 2023, and before Oct. 1, 2024, the maximum award of $4,000 is reduced by 5.7% ($228), resulting in a maximum award of $3,772.

For less than full-time enrollment, awards will be prorated as follows:

  • 3/4 Time Enrollment = 75% of Award

  • 1/2 Time Enrollment = 50% of Award

  • 1/4 Time Enrollment = 25% of Award

Students who receive a federal TEACH Grant must complete a service obligation by serving as a highly-qualified teacher in a designated high-need field at a low-income school for four years within eight years of completing a TEACH Grant eligible program. Failure to complete teaching service will result in the TEACH Grant being converted to an unsubsidized Stafford loan with retroactive interest.

  • Complete a valid Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).

  • Information about the TEACH Grant is available from the US Department of Education.

  • Students must complete an online Agreement to Serve (ATS) and TEACH Grant Counseling with the US Department of Education each year they receive a TEACH Grant award.

  • The Directory of Low Income Schools is available here. 

  • The list of “high need” fields by state is available here. 

  • Students who are graduating or leaving their TEACH Grant program must complete the TEACH Grant exit counseling.

*Please note – awards first disbursed on or after March 1, 2013 are subject to a reduction due to cuts in federal financial aid as a result of the “sequester.” Awards first made on or after this date will not be eligible for the full $4,000 award without congressional action.

 

Special Rule in the Higher Education Act (HEA), formerly called “Iraq and Afghanistan Service Grants (IASG)” and “Children of Fallen Heroes (CFH) Scholarships.”

For students whose parent or guardian died in the line of duty while either serving on active duty as a member of the U.S. Armed Forces on or after Sept. 11, 2001, or actively serving as and performing the duties of a public safety officer.

Must be ineligible for a Federal Pell Grant due only to having less financial need than is required to receive Pell funds. Must have been less than 33 years old as of the January 1 prior to the award year for which the applicant is applying (e.g., For the 2024–25 award year, a student must be younger than 33 years old as of Jan. 1, 2024, to be eligible.).

Students who received a grant under Iraq and Afghanistan Service Grant or Children of Fallen Heroes Scholarship criteria during the 2023-24 academic year but don’t meet eligibility under the Special Rule may still receive a maximum Pell Grant under legacy eligibility. For more information click here.

Federal Direct Loans

Loans are funds which will need to be repaid and include Federal Direct Loans, Federal Consolidation Loans, and Private Loans. For more information see our Manage Your Federal Student Loans page.

Scholarships

Scholarships are gifts. They don’t need to be repaid. There are thousands of them, offered by schools, employers, individuals, private companies, nonprofits, communities, religious groups, and professional and social organizations.

Visit our scholarships page for more information on WOU scholarships, external scholarships, and helpful resources.

Federal Work Study

Federal Work-Study (FWS) Program

The Federal Work Study Program is available to eligible undergraduate and graduate students. This program provides funds for employing students who qualify for part-time jobs either on-campus, or off-campus in community service positions. The amount that you earn is limited to the amount that appears on your award letter. However, once you have earned the amount noted on your award letter, you may petition the Financial Aid Office to increase your work study funds.

You will receive an hourly wage based on the type of work you do, your skills, and your experience. You can work a maximum of 20 hours per week except during vacation periods when up to 40 hours per week is allowed. You will be paid monthly based on the number of hours you worked in the pay period. It is your responsibility to locate a job.*

You may view current job postings by clicking here. For assistance with the availability of job openings contact the Center for Professional Pathways (1st floor of the Werner University Center, WUC 119). Paychecks are disbursed at the end of the month from the Payroll Office and are based on the number of hours worked during the pay period.

*You are not guaranteed a job or that you will earn the total work-study amount listed on your award letter.

 

Community Service Work Study Program

Federal Work Study can be used in such community service areas as health care, child care, literacy training, education, welfare, public safety, crime prevention and control, rural development, and community improvement. Using work-study in this way allows students to work in direct service roles with their local community and still earn money.

If you are eligible for Federal Work-Study, we encourage you to look at the opportunities available to you, or develop your own job. If you know of a community or social agency that may want to participate in the off-campus federal work study program, contact the Center for Professional Pathways at 503-838-8432.

Private Education Loans

There are times when grants and federal loans are not enough to cover the cost of attending school. If that happens, students and parents have options for private loans. Students who become ineligible for federal aid may also pursue private alternative loans. The rates private lenders offer are not as competitive as federal loans, and we strongly encourage students to pursue federal loans before private loans.

You can find information about Private Education Loan Lenders on the ELM Select website. The lenders listed here are simply lenders who have loaned to WOU students in the last few years. Western Oregon University does not endorse any one lender. The information at this link is simply informational. The student has the right to whatever lender they want, should they pursue a private alternative loan.

 

Taxability of Various Types of Educational Assistance

Note: Some or all of your financial aid (from scholarships, fellowships, need-based education grants, and qualified tuition reductions) may be considered taxable income. Please consult IRS Publication 970, Chapter 1 for more information.

 

Paying for college

  • Getting started
  • Types of Aid
  • Disbursement process
  • Manage your federal student loans
  • Summer term
  • Textbook resources
  • Veterans benefits

Contact

Financial Aid Office

toll free 1-877-877-1593 | or e-mail: finaid@wou.edu | Location: Welcome Center 140

Western Oregon University

Facebook   Instagram   X  YouTube

WESTERN OREGON UNIVERSITY
345 Monmouth Ave. N.
Monmouth OR 97361

503-838-8000 | 1-877-877-1593

Tools

Campus Maps
Canvas
Find People
Portal
WOU Email
Technical Support

Resources

A-Z Index
Accessibility
Academic Calendar
Class Schedule
Jobs at WOU
News
Explore WOU
Partnerships
Student Services
Freedom of Expression

Western Oregon University’s Land Acknowledgement
Western Oregon University in Monmouth, OR is located within the traditional homelands of the Luckiamute Band of Kalapuya. Following the Willamette Valley Treaty of 1855 (Kalapuya etc. Treaty), Kalapuya people were forcibly removed to reservations in Western Oregon. Today, living descendants of these people are a part of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde Community of Oregon and the Confederated Tribes of the Siletz Indians.

Accessibility    Public Records    Privacy    Student Consumer Information

WOU prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, sex, national or ethnic origin, age, religion, marital status, disability, veteran status, sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression in all programs, activities and employment practices as required by Title IX, other applicable laws, and policies. Retaliation is prohibited by WOU.