Class Of 2026 Sets FAFSA Completion Record At 59.1%, NCAN Reports
The high school class of 2026 completed the FAFSA at a record 59.1% rate through June 26, according to the National College Attainment Network (NCAN). That shatters the previous June 30 record of 54.4%, set by the class of 2018, by nearly five percentage points.
The milestone caps a remarkable two-year recovery from the botched FAFSA rollout, and it suggests the simplified form is finally delivering on its promise.
FAFSA completion is one of the strongest predictors of whether a high school senior enrolls in college. More than 200,000 additional seniors completed the form this cycle compared to the class of 2025 (a 9% increase) meaning hundreds of thousands more students are positioned to receive Pell Grants, federal loans, and state financial aid this fall.
Tennessee led all states at 72.7%, followed by Illinois (71.6%), Texas (69.3%), New Jersey (67.5%), and Mississippi (66.3%). Alaska posted the largest year-over-year gain at 20.7%, with New Mexico, Florida, Montana, and Arizona rounding out the top five gainers.
NCAN points to three factors:
1. The 2026-27 FAFSA opened early on September 24, after two straight cycles that launched late in December — giving families two extra months.
2. The Office of Federal Student Aid also streamlined the process itself, including instant identity verification for most users with a Social Security number, replacing a multi-day wait. And this is the third year under the new form, so counselors and college access groups have built familiarity with the process.
3. Universal FAFSA policies are also showing up in the results. Nine states now require or expect FAFSA completion for high school graduation, and those states account for three of the top five and six of the top 10 completion rates.
“FAFSA simplification shows what is possible when bipartisan policy, tireless advocacy and sustained practice improvements align,” said Kim Cook, NCAN’s CEO, in a statement.
The record confirms a trend we’ve been tracking all year. In May, the class of 2026 had already set an all-time completion record at 54.7% with two months still left before the June 30 benchmark.
And the gains go beyond completion counts: a GAO report found FAFSA simplification added 1.9 million students to Pell Grant eligibility rolls.
The simpler form isn’t just getting more students to finish — it’s qualifying more of them for financial aid.
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