Paper filing, online, and professionally are all ways you can do this.
What are taxes?
This is the bank's accounting of your transactions
What is Bank Statement?
This is the date that FAFSA opens.
What is October 1st?
This type of savings account keeps your money stuck for a certain amount of time.
What is a Certificate of Deposit (CD)?
You get this from getting points from paying back loans and credit cards.
What is credit score?
This is the month you need to file taxes by.
What is April?
This is the fee your bank gives you if you pay more than you have in your account.
What is overdraft fee?
This is commonly referred to as EFC and shows how much your family can pay towards your higher education.
This is how much you should put aside from each paycheck for savings. (In percentage)
What is 20%
This is an open line of credit that can be used for any purchases as long as you're under the credit limit.
This is the form you file for income taxes.
This is what you use to keep track of your transactions.
What is a check register?
This is referred as your SAR on FAFSA.
What is Student Aid Report?
Online savings accounts have (higher/lower) interest rates compared to traditional.
What is higher?
This is debt tied to a specific asset that can be used as collateral and repossessed if borrower doesn't make payments.
What is secured debt?
This form tells employers how much to take out for taxes.
What is W4?
This is what you use to keep track of what you spend on paper
Work-study, loans, grants, and scholarships are all examples of this.
What is Financial Aid?
You create this type of fund to prepare for unexpected expenses.
What is an emergency fund?
This type of rate remains constant during the duration of the loan.
What is fixed rate?
This is the sum of all wages, salaries, and profits before taxes are taken out.
What is gross income?
You use this to identify the missing transactions between your check register and bank statement.
What is Reconciliation Worksheet?
This student loan payment plan increases every 2 years.
What is Graduated?
401K, Roth IRA, and investing are all examples of saving for this.
What is retirement?
What are Installment Loans?