Scholarships for Students With Siblings in College (2026 Guide)

February

1) Xavier University Family Grants

Why It Slaps: This one is better than the average sibling discount because Xavier spells out two different award levels. If two siblings are enrolled full-time, each gets a $1,000 family grant for the year. If three or more siblings are enrolled at the same time, each student can receive $5,000 per academic year, which is a serious jump and one of the strongest published family-grant structures I found.
Amount: $1,000 per academic year for each student when two siblings are enrolled full-time; $5,000 per academic year for each student when three or more siblings are enrolled simultaneously.
Deadline: FAFSA by February 15 priority deadline, then request the Family Grant from Student Financial Services.
Apply/info: Xavier University Family Grants


March

2) Arcadia University Sibling Grant

Why It Slaps: Arcadia keeps this one simple and clean. It is a $2,000 annual award for the sibling of a currently enrolled Arcadia undergraduate who enrolls as a full-time undergraduate student, which makes it easy to understand and easy to pitch in a family-cost article.
Amount: $2,000 annually.
Deadline: March 15 priority deadline for new students.
Apply/info: Arcadia University Undergraduate Financial Aid


April

3) University of Dallas Freshman Family Grant

Why It Slaps: This is one of the best true matches for the article title because UDallas explicitly says the student can qualify if they have at least one other sibling in college, whether that sibling attends UDallas or somewhere else. That makes it broader than the usual same-campus sibling award, and the size is meaningful enough to matter in a real aid package.
Amount: $5,000.
Deadline: April 1, 2026.
Apply/info: University of Dallas Freshman Family Grant


August

4) Lancaster Bible College Sibling Scholarship

Why It Slaps: LBC’s award is not huge, but it is very transparent. The college publishes the amount, the household requirement, and the renewal standard, which makes it useful for families trying to model real costs instead of guessing.
Amount: $1,200 annually.
Deadline: August 1.
Apply/info: Lancaster Bible College Financial Aid


Varies / ask the college early

5) The Catholic University of America Sibling Grant

Why It Slaps: This is one of the most important finds in the whole list because Catholic explicitly ties the grant to the FAFSA-era loss of the federal “number in college” break. The school says the award is for new first-year undergraduates with multiple siblings in college, and it does not require a separate application, which is rare and genuinely useful.
Amount: $5,000.
Deadline: Varies; the verified page says no separate application is required, so students should complete their admission and aid file early and verify timing with Catholic.
Apply/info: Catholic University Sibling Grant

6) Mount St. Mary’s University Family Grant

Why It Slaps: This is a straightforward campus-based family award for incoming students who have a sibling already enrolled full-time at the Emmitsburg campus. It is not based on financial need, which makes it a helpful stacker for families that may not look Pell-eligible on paper but still feel squeezed.
Amount: $1,000.
Deadline: Varies; confirm with admissions and financial aid for the current incoming class.
Apply/info: Mount St. Mary’s First-Year Student Financial Aid

7) Salisbury University Sea Gull Sibling Scholarship

Why It Slaps: Salisbury’s version stands out because it is tied to 5% of tuition instead of a flat dollar amount, and the school says eligible students can qualify while enrolled at least half-time. That makes it more flexible than some sibling awards that require full-time status only.
Amount: Equivalent to 5% of tuition.
Deadline: Varies; ask Salisbury to confirm the current award cycle.
Apply/info: Salisbury University Admission Scholarships

8) Otterbein University Sibling Grant

Why It Slaps: Otterbein publishes a clean per-sibling number, which is exactly what parents want when building a real budget. It is a good fit for dependent undergraduates who will be enrolled concurrently full-time.
Amount: $1,000 annually for each sibling.
Deadline: Varies; verify with Otterbein Financial Aid.
Apply/info: Otterbein University Grants FAQ

9) The University of Olivet Sibling Scholarship

Why It Slaps: Olivet keeps the offer very easy to understand: families with multiple siblings enrolled in the same academic year can get a recurring annual sibling scholarship. For a school-specific sibling award, the published amount is solid.
Amount: $2,000 per year.
Deadline: Varies; contact admissions for the current cycle.
Apply/info: University of Olivet Relationship Based Scholarships

10) Gwynedd Mercy University Sibling Grant

Why It Slaps: This one has a nice twist. GMercyU says the grant is renewable for up to three years even after one sibling graduates, as long as the other sibling stays enrolled full-time, which makes it more generous than many same-time-only sibling awards.
Amount: $2,000.
Deadline: Varies; confirm with GMercyU for the current class.
Apply/info: Gwynedd Mercy University Scholarships

11) Andrew College Sibling Scholarship

Why It Slaps: Andrew College directly frames this scholarship around families sending multiple children to college at the same time. The award is clearly published, annual, and easy to explain in a cost-of-attendance comparison.
Amount: $1,500 annually.
Deadline: Varies; verify current admissions and aid timing.
Apply/info: Andrew College Institutional Scholarships

12) Ithaca College Sibling Grant

Why It Slaps: Ithaca’s award is clean, non-need-based, and easy for students to understand. It is one of the better examples of a simple campus-based sibling benefit without a lot of extra conditions in the public description.
Amount: $1,000 per year.
Deadline: Varies; ask Ithaca Student Financial Services.
Apply/info: Ithaca College Grants

13) Fairleigh Dickinson University Family Grant

Why It Slaps: FDU publishes this as a per-student family grant for families with two or more dependent children enrolled simultaneously at FDU. That makes it a strong institutional option for families intentionally keeping siblings at the same college.
Amount: $1,500 each year.
Deadline: Varies; confirm with FDU Financial Aid.
Apply/info: FDU Family Grant

14) Corban University Sibling Grant

Why It Slaps: Corban does not overcomplicate this one. The school clearly says the grant exists to support families sending more than one student to Corban at the same time, and the “per sibling” structure makes it easy to estimate.
Amount: $1,000 per sibling.
Deadline: Varies; verify with Corban admissions.
Apply/info: Corban University Sibling Grant

15) Misericordia University Sibling Scholarship

Why It Slaps: Misericordia is unusually specific: the scholarship goes to the eldest sibling, and if more than two siblings are enrolled, the eldest sibling or siblings get the grant. That kind of specificity is helpful because many colleges leave families guessing about which student actually receives the award.
Amount: $1,000 per year.
Deadline: Varies; verify with the university for the current cycle.
Apply/info: Misericordia Full-Time Undergraduate Financial Aid

16) Providence College Family Grant

Why It Slaps: Providence still publishes a true family grant for two or more immediate family members attending at the same time. The award goes to the younger student unless that student is already fully covered by institutional tuition money, in which case Providence may shift it to the older sibling.
Amount: $1,000.
Deadline: Varies; confirm directly with Providence Financial Aid.
Apply/info: Providence College Family Grant

17) Jacksonville University Sibling Scholarship

Why It Slaps: Jacksonville publishes one of the stronger campus sibling awards on the list. It is aimed at incoming undergraduates pursuing their first degree who have a sibling currently enrolled at JU, and the four-year renewable structure gives it real long-term value.
Amount: $2,500 per year for up to four years, awarded to the youngest sibling.
Deadline: Varies; students must designate the sibling relationship on the admissions application and should verify the current cycle with JU.
Apply/info: Jacksonville University Programs & Scholarships

18) Daemen University Sibling Scholarship

Why It Slaps: Daemen’s published amount is strong for a sibling award. The school says the scholarship is $3,000 a year and renewable for the incoming sibling for four years, which puts it on the higher side of this category.
Amount: $3,000 a year.
Deadline: Varies; verify with Daemen Admissions/Financial Aid.
Apply/info: Daemen University Scholarships & Grants

19) Asbury University Multi-Family Grant

Why It Slaps: Asbury’s language is refreshingly direct: students with a sibling attending Asbury concurrently can receive the Multi-Family Grant. It is not the biggest award on the board, but it is easy to understand and easy for families to stack into a real affordability plan.
Amount: $1,000.
Deadline: Varies; the grant is tied to the student’s application information, so students should apply early and confirm current timing with Asbury.
Apply/info: Asbury University Undergraduate Scholarships

20) Bethany College Sibling Grant

Why It Slaps: Bethany is a useful inclusion because the eligibility language is broader than many same-campus-only awards. The college says full-time new first-year or transfer students can qualify if they have a brother, sister, or parent currently enrolled in college as a full-time student, which gives some families another angle to explore.
Amount: $1,000 annually.
Deadline: Varies; the official page says students should identify the concurrent enrollment on the admission application or contact their admission counselor.
Apply/info: Bethany College Grants & Scholarships


FAQs

Are there many national scholarships just for having a sibling in college?

Not really. In today’s market, the strongest real fits are usually institutional sibling grants or family grants published by individual colleges, not big national outside-scholarship databases. That is why this article leans heavily on official college award pages.

Does FAFSA still lower your federal aid index because two kids are in college at the same time?

No. Schools now say the Student Aid Index does not take the number of students in college into account, which can reduce need-based eligibility for families with siblings in college.

Should each sibling still file a FAFSA?

Yes. Federal Student Aid says each child must start and complete their own FAFSA, and parents complete separate contributor sections for each child’s form.

Can families appeal for more aid because multiple siblings are in college?

Sometimes, yes. Federal Student Aid says students can contact schools to request an aid adjustment for special financial circumstances, and some colleges now publish specific “multiple siblings in college” appeal routes.

Do both siblings always get the money?

No. Some schools award both students, some award each eligible sibling, some give the grant only to the younger student, and some to the eldest sibling. Always read the fine print before assuming the discount applies to everyone in the family.

What is the smartest play for families with siblings in college right now?

Do three things fast: file each FAFSA correctly, look for college-specific sibling/family grants, and ask each financial aid office whether they review multiple siblings in college as a special circumstance for institutional aid. That combination matters more now than the old federal “sibling discount” ever did.


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