<p>hello I’d like a clarification:
let’s say that somebody has been accepted in harvard but he has no money to pay, (I’ve understood that financial aid are awarded on the basis of demonstrated financial need and there’s a need-blind admission even for international students) to sum up my question is
Will he receive automatically a financial aid even though he can pay nothing? or is there a risk that he can’t go there because of his lack of money or a too vast number of applicants who are in the same situation?</p>
<p>Once you are accepted to Harvard, they make sure that you don’t have any problem attending it including financial issues. This is the same with all the top schools.</p>
<p>Yes, financial aid is reliable, but it is not automatically given to you. You must apply for financial aid every year and Harvard re-evalutes your family’s need every year. So long as your income (and your parents’ income) stay about the same, the percentage of what you pay remains the same.</p>
<p>See: [Application</a> Instructions](<a href=“http://www.fao.fas.harvard.edu/icb/icb.do?keyword=k51861&pageid=icb.page244003]Application”>http://www.fao.fas.harvard.edu/icb/icb.do?keyword=k51861&pageid=icb.page244003). If you applied SCEA and filled out the financial aid forms correctly and on-time, you should receive an estimated financial aid award in mid-December with your acceptance letter. If you did not fill out the forms, you must complete those forms in order to get aid.</p>