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Tuition Refund Policy


Students are considered in attendance until they officially withdraw from school or are requested to do so by a Dean. Students, who leave school voluntarily or drop a course, must do so through the proper channels or otherwise risk assuming full tuition charges. Students who fail to formally withdraw may also be responsible for repaying all or part of the financial aid funds received in the term.

Steps in Withdrawal Process:
  • The student must complete a Withdrawal form available in the Office of Academic Advisement.
  • The signed Withdrawal form is processed in the Center for Student Services.
  • The student's financial aid eligibility may be revised, subject to federal, state and institutional refund policies. The refund policy is listed below and is published in the College Catalogue. Fees are not refundable.

Consult the College Catalogue for additional details regarding withdrawal procedures

Treatment of Title IV Aid When a Student Withdraws


The law specifies how Marymount Manhattan College must determine the amount of Title IV program assistance that you earn if you withdraw from school. The Title IV programs that are covered by this law are: Federal Pell Grants, Academic Competitiveness Grants, National SMART grants, TEACH Grants, Stafford Loans, PLUS Loans, Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants (SEOG), and Federal Perkins Loans.

When you withdraw during your payment period or period of enrollment the amount of Title IV program assistance that you have earned up to that point is determined by a specific formula. If you , Marymount or your parent received on your behalf less assistance than the amount that you earned, you may be able to receive those additional funds. If you received more assistance than you earned, the excess funds must be returned by Marymount Manhattan College and/or you.

The amount of financial aid assistance that you have earned is determined on a prorata basis. For example, if you completed 30% of your payment period or period of enrollment, you earn 30% of the assistance you were originally scheduled to receive. Once you have completed more than 60% of the payment period or period of enrollment, you earn all the assistance that you were scheduled to receive for that period.

If you did not receive all of the funds that you earned, you may be due a Post-withdrawal disbursement. If your Post-withdrawal disbursement includes loan funds, Marymount must get your permission before it can disburse them. You may choose to decline some or all of the loan funds so that you don't incur additional debt. Marymount Manhattan College may automatically use all or a portion of your Post-withdrawal disbursement of grant funds for tuition, fees, and room and board charges (as contracted with the school). The school needs your permission to use the Post-withdrawal grant disbursement for all other school charges. If you do not give your permission you will be offered the funds. However, it may be in your best interest to allow the Marymount to keep the funds to reduce your debt at the school.

There are some Title IV funds that you were scheduled to receive that cannot be disbursed to you once you withdraw because of other eligibility requirements. For example, if you are a first-time, first-year undergraduate student and you have not completed the first 30 days of your program before you withdraw, you will not receive any FFEL or Direct loan funds that you would have received had you remained enrolled past the 30th day.

If you receive (or MMC or parent receives on your behalf) excess Title IV program funds that must be returned, MMC must return a portion of the excess equal to the lesser of: