Family size on the FAFSA
How household size feeds the income protection allowance and your SAI.
Your family size on the FAFSA is generally the number of people on the relevant tax return - for a dependent student, the parents plus everyone they claim as dependents (including the student). Family size matters because it sets the income protection allowance (IPA): a larger household shelters more income, which lowers available income and the Student Aid Index. For 2026-27, the parents' IPA rises from $29,190 for a household of two to $61,930 for six, plus $6,990 for each additional member.
Source: U.S. Dept. of Education, 2026-27 SAI and Pell Grant Eligibility Guide. Data as of June 2026.
Parents' income protection allowance by family size (2026-27)
| Household size (incl. student) | Income protection allowance |
|---|---|
| 2 | $29,190 |
| 3 | $36,330 |
| 4 | $44,880 |
| 5 | $52,950 |
| 6 | $61,930 |
| 7+ | $61,930 + $6,990 each |
Source: U.S. Dept. of Education, 2026-27 SAI and Pell Grant Eligibility Guide. Data as of June 2026.
See the independent-student IPA tables on the full IPA page.
How to count your household
- Include the student.
- Include the parent(s) whose information is on the FAFSA (for a dependent student).
- Include other children and dependents the parents support and claim on taxes.
- Independent students count themselves, a spouse, and their own dependents.
Why it lowers your SAI
The IPA is subtracted from income before the assessment schedule runs. A bigger allowance means less income is "available," so the contribution - and the SAI - is smaller. Try changing the household-size field in the SAI calculator to see the effect.
Frequently asked questions
Who counts in my FAFSA family size?
Your family size is generally the number of people claimed as dependents on the relevant tax return (the student plus parents and their dependents for a dependent student). The 2024-25 simplification ties family size to the tax return, though you can update it if your household changed.
Does a bigger family size lower my SAI?
Usually yes. Larger households get a larger income protection allowance, which shelters more income, reducing available income and the resulting SAI.
Do I count a sibling in college?
You count household members for family size, but the FAFSA no longer reduces the parent contribution for multiple students in college. See our number-in-college explainer.
Sources
U.S. Dept. of Education, 2026-27 SAI and Pell Grant Eligibility Guide. Data as of June 2026 for 2026-27. General information, not financial-aid advice. Verify at studentaid.gov.
Last updated: 2026-06-22