<p>I know I qualify for one, but don’t know how it works.</p>
<p>your counselor at school can help you with that</p>
<p>you can do it online when you are ready to send your application. You have to be careful though, you can only try it once.</p>
<p>oh</p>
<p>does anybody what are the requirements to meet in order to get fee waivers</p>
<p>family makes about 40k for 6 persons</p>
<p>If one of your parents is a veteran (they might need to be disabled, I don’t remember) you qualify for a fairly large variety of fee waivers also. </p>
<p>Whatever you do, make sure you look into it ahead of time, and be persistent. The bureaucracy is just awful, and my brothers have been at UCSD for two years and have yet to actually pin the government down.</p>
<p>Information concerning fee waivers from the college board</p>
<p><a href=“College Board - SAT, AP, College Search and Admission Tools”>College Board - SAT, AP, College Search and Admission Tools;
<p>Students who use SAT fee waivers who plan to enter college in September 2004 are eligible to receive up to four Request for Waiver of College Application Fee forms. These forms notify participating colleges that you have participated in the SAT Program Fee-Waiver Service and request that colleges waive their application fees.</p>
<p>Note: an institution listed in the Directory of Colleges Cooperating with SAT Program Fee-Waiver Service is not obligated to waive its application fee for every SAT Program fee-waiver recipient who applies.</p>