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Scholarship Scams
In your scholarship search you may find people just itching to take
advantage of you. Be wary of the following statements:

1. "This scholarship requires a handling fee."
  • There are a few scholarships that ask for a small fee of $5 or less
    to cover the cost of processing and/or mailing application
    materials. Be extremely cautious if a program wants more. There
    are also some programs that request large application fees like
    $15.00. Imagine if 1,000,000 students (realistic given the large
    reach of the Internet) applied for a scholarship like this at $15.00
    each. Even if the program gave out 100 scholarships of $50,000
    each to cover four years of college, where’s does the rest of the
    money go? When large sums of money are involved and
    programs are asking for fees of $10 or more, make sure to double
    check with an outside resource like your counselor to make sure
    its legitimate. Please note that some art and talent competitions
    ask for larger application fees ($25 - $45) to cover judging and
    processing costs. Although many of these are legitimate, check it
    out with a counselor or the Federal Trade Commission if it
    sounds fishy.

2.  "We'll do all the work for you."
  • Almost all legitimate scholarship programs require some sort of
    application or essay. Marianne Ragins applied for many
    scholarships in her search and all of them required some type of
    work. When you hear or see comments like this, it really is too
    good to be true.

3.  "We need your credit card number or bank account number to hold this
scholarship."
  • Never give your credit card or bank number to hold a scholarship.
    Scholarships are free money to those who qualify and they
    shouldn't cost you anything to hold them. If you have legitimately
    won a scholarship, it should be yours to claim based on your
    application and your meeting the requirements of the scholarship.

4. "We guarantee we'll find you at least 10 scholarships."
  • This statement, or ones like it, are used by many shady
    scholarship search services. Many of these services merely send
    you a list of loans that are available for college. If you're like
    Marianne and don't consider a loan a scholarship, then be sure to
    ask plenty of questions before paying for these services. Winning
    Scholarships for College contains a list of questions you should
    ask scholarship search services before paying for their help.

5.  "You have been selected by a "National Foundation" to receive a
scholarship or you have won a scholarship contest to which you never
actually applied.
  • To win a scholarship from a program to which you have never
    applied nor entered is rare.

6.  "You are eligible to receive a free scholarship and financial aid
package. Please call us to schedule your appointment at XYZ hotel to
pick it up."
  • Usually when you go to pick up your free package at the hotel, you
    and your parents are subjected to high pressure sales methods
    meant to make you spend hundreds or thousands of dollars to
    help you with your scholarship search. The help you receive is
    something you can usually get from a counselor or by reading a
    book.

If you get information from anyone using these statements contact the
Federal Trade Commission, (877) FTC-HELP,
http://www.ftc.gov or the
National Fraud Information Center (NFIC), (800) 876-7060,
http://www.
fraud.org.
The Scholarship ToolBox
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(703) 579-4245
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