United States Department of Education rolled quietly An automated identity-verification feature on the FAFSA portal launched Sunday screens each applicant in real time as part of an expanded effort to prevent fraudulent aid claims and so-called “ghost students.”
Students filling out the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) will now be assessed for identity fraud risk in real time. Low- or moderate-risk applicants see no changes to the process, according to an announcement from the Office of Federal Student Aid. High-risk flags trigger a live automated camera check that requires government-issued ID – driver’s license, passport, tribal ID, or permanent resident card.
If the ID is cleared, the application proceeds normally. If it is denied, or the applicant is unable to present ID on the spot, the Institutional Student Information Record (ISIR) is rejected and the student must contact their college’s financial aid office in person.
why it matters: Ghost students (individuals who collect federal aid without attending classes) are costing federal taxpayers an estimated $1 billion per year.
California Community College System informed About 31% of applications during the 2024–25 academic year were fraudulent, with nearly $10 million in federal aid and $3 million in state and local aid awarded to ghost students.
How FAFSA Identity Verification Works: The new tool sits on top of an existing verification policy that places selected applicants into one of three tracking groups: V1 (standard income and tax verification), V4 (identification only), or V5 (both). Schools must verify all FPS-selected applicants who receive subsidized Title IV aid and report the identity verification results within 60 days of the student’s first request.
However, the automated system is not perfect. Flagged students must have a government-issued ID and a smartphone or tablet – a laptop alone will not suffice. The session cannot be paused, so any student participating in the FAFSA completion program without a license may get stuck.
There is actually no flag separating fraudulently rejected ISIRs from legitimate students “caught in the net”. It is left to the discretion of individual institutions to take action on rejected applicants.
How it connects: FAFSA fraud detection has become increasingly stringent since the Department of Education identified ghost students as a priority in 2024. For students who apply legitimately, the bigger risk is process friction: new deadlines, rejected ISIRs, and delayed disbursements that push families toward private student loans or tuition payment plans.
The Education Department says the majority of rejected applications will be fraudulent, and financial aid administrators will no longer perform most identity verification themselves. However, legitimate students flagged in error need the right technology and ID at the right time, or face manual overrides that may not happen quickly.
Don’t miss these other stories:
