Cal Grant is California’s biggest state financial aid for college, money for tuition or living costs that you never pay back. It’s not a loan, and there’s no separate “Cal Grant application” to fill out. You’re considered automatically when you file the FAFSA (or California Dream Act Application) and submit your GPA by the deadline. That deadline is the catch. Miss March 2, 2026, and you can lose thousands for the whole year. This breaks down the three Cal Grant types, what each pays, who qualifies, and the two steps you must finish on time.
The short version
Cal Grant is free college money for California students based on income, GPA, and your school. There are three types (A, B, C), and you’re placed into the right one automatically, no choosing.
It can cover full systemwide tuition at a UC or CSU (thousands of dollars a year), or come as a living-cost award. The hard deadline is March 2, 2026, and you must do two things by then: file the FAFSA/CADAA and submit your verified GPA.
Undocumented students can qualify too, by filing the California Dream Act Application instead of the FAFSA.
Do you qualify? A 30-second check
- Are you a California resident attending an eligible California college?
- Do you meet the GPA minimum? (3.0 for Cal Grant A, 2.0 for B, none required for C)
- Is your family income and assets under the ceiling? The asset limit is $111,900 for dependent students in 2026–27.
- Can you file by March 2, 2026, both the FAFSA/CADAA and your GPA?
The three Cal Grant types
You don’t pick one; CSAC places you based on your FAFSA/CADAA, GPA, financial need, and college. What each one does:
| Type | Who | What it covers |
|---|---|---|
| Cal Grant A | Strong GPA (3.0+), middle-to-low income | Full systemwide tuition & fees (set each year; higher at a UC than a CSU) |
| Cal Grant B | Lower-income students (2.0+ GPA) | A living-cost “access award” (set annually) the first year, plus tuition from the second year |
| Cal Grant C | Career or technical training | Help with tuition and books/supplies for vocational programs |
At a community college, tuition is already low, so many students get the Cal Grant B access award to help with living costs. Exact award amounts depend on your college and are set each year by CSAC.
Income, asset, and GPA rules
- GPA: Cal Grant A needs a 3.0 high-school GPA (2.4 for continuing college students); Cal Grant B needs 2.0; Cal Grant C has no strict GPA minimum but reviews academic progress.
- Assets: the 2026–27 ceiling is $111,900 for dependent students, and $53,300 for independent students.
- Income: ceilings vary by grant type and family size; Cal Grant A and C allow higher income than the very-low-income Cal Grant B. Your FAFSA/CADAA numbers decide it, so file even if you’re unsure.
The deadline that decides everything
How to apply (two steps)
- File the FAFSA at studentaid.gov, or the California Dream Act Application (CADAA) at dream.csac.ca.gov if you’re undocumented or can’t file the FAFSA. It’s free, and it’s how your income is checked.
- Make sure your GPA reaches CSAC. Most high schools and colleges send it electronically, but confirm. About a week after filing, create a WebGrants 4 Students account at mygrantinfo.csac.ca.gov and check that your GPA is listed. If it isn’t, ask your school’s financial aid office or submit a GPA Verification Form.
- Track and accept your award in that same WebGrants 4 Students account, where CSAC posts your Cal Grant offer (starting in spring).
One FAFSA opens several doors. The same FAFSA/CADAA that qualifies you for Cal Grant is also used for the federal Pell Grant and the California Middle Class Scholarship, so filing once can stack multiple aid sources. You still accept each award separately through your school or CSAC. See related programs in our California benefits guide.
Quick answers
Do I apply for Cal Grant A, B, or C?
No, you don’t choose. You’re automatically placed into the right type based on your FAFSA/CADAA, GPA, and college.
Can undocumented students get Cal Grant?
Yes. File the California Dream Act Application (CADAA) instead of the FAFSA, and submit your GPA by the same March 2 deadline.
What if I miss March 2?
Community college students have an extended September 2 deadline for some awards. Otherwise you generally wait until the next year, so don’t miss it.
Does Cal Grant cover community college?
Yes. Since tuition is low there, many students receive the Cal Grant B access award toward living costs, and tuition help transfers if they move to a four-year school.
Bottom line
Cal Grant is free money for college: full tuition at a UC or CSU for Cal Grant A, or a living-cost award for lower-income students under Cal Grant B. Either way, you’re placed automatically. Undocumented students qualify through the CADAA.
The whole thing turns on one date. File your FAFSA or CADAA and get your GPA submitted before March 2, 2026. The single most expensive mistake students make here isn’t a bad GPA, it’s forgetting the GPA step entirely.