California offers some of the most generous state financial aid in the country, led by the Cal Grant and the Middle Class Scholarship. To be considered, you file the FAFSA or the California Dream Act Application by the March 2, 2026 priority deadline, and your high school submits a verified GPA. These programs can cover much or all of tuition at a UC, CSU, or California Community College for eligible students.
If your student plans to attend college in California, state aid can be worth thousands a year on top of federal aid. The key is filing on time and knowing which programs you qualify for. Here is a quick guide to the main ones for 2026-27.
What state financial aid does California offer?
California's core state aid programs are the Cal Grant and the Middle Class Scholarship, both for residents attending eligible California colleges. The Cal Grant is need-based and can cover tuition plus, in some cases, living costs; the Middle Class Scholarship helps families further up the income scale. Both require you to apply through the state's financial aid system.
These stack on top of federal aid like the Pell Grant. For how the federal pieces work, see our complete 2026-27 financial aid guide.
What is the Cal Grant?
The Cal Grant is California's main need-based state grant, with versions (A, B, and C) that help with tuition, fees, and sometimes living and book costs. Eligibility depends on your income, your GPA, and the type of college you attend. For many lower- and middle-income students, the Cal Grant covers systemwide tuition at a UC or CSU.
To qualify, you generally must be a California resident, meet income and asset limits, and have a qualifying GPA submitted by your school. File on time and confirm your GPA was sent, since a missing GPA is a common reason eligible students lose the grant.
What is the Middle Class Scholarship?
The Middle Class Scholarship (MCS) helps undergraduates at UC, CSU, and select community colleges whose families earn too much for the full Cal Grant. For 2026-27, the family income and asset ceiling for dependent students is $250,000, so it reaches well into the middle and upper-middle class. The award fills part of the gap left after other aid is applied.
Award amounts vary year to year based on state funding and the number of eligible students, so treat it as helpful but not guaranteed at a fixed dollar figure. It is available for up to eight semesters for eligible undergraduates.
How do you apply for California state aid?
You apply by submitting the FAFSA or the California Dream Act Application (CADAA) and making sure your GPA is on file, all by the March 2, 2026 priority deadline. Community college students have a later secondary window, until September 2, 2026, for some Cal Grant awards. One application is used to consider you for these state programs.
Your step-by-step path:
- File the FAFSA, or the CADAA if you are not eligible for federal aid, by March 2, 2026.
- Confirm your school submitted your verified GPA to the state.
- Create an account at the California Student Aid Commission to track your awards.
- Watch your college's own aid deadlines too.
Your next step
California's Cal Grant and Middle Class Scholarship can dramatically lower what your family pays, but only if you file by March 2, 2026 and get your GPA on file. Start with the FAFSA or CADAA, confirm your GPA, and track everything at the California Student Aid Commission. Read our complete 2026-27 financial aid guide for the federal side, then create your free CollegeLens plan to see your real cost at each California school.
You're doing the hard, smart work of claiming every dollar your state offers. That's exactly how California families make college affordable.
-- Sravani at CollegeLens
