Workforce Pell Grants Arrive to Fund Short Job Training Programs
Published Date: 5/19/2026
Rule
Summary
Starting July 20, 2026, students and schools will see new rules for Pell Grants thanks to the Working Families Tax Cuts Act. Now, some other grants won’t count against Pell Grant eligibility, and a new Workforce Pell Grant will help students in short, job-focused programs get financial aid. This means more chances for students to get money for education that leads straight to good jobs!
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Analyzed Economic Effects
10 provisions identified: 3 benefits, 6 costs, 1 mixed.
Pell Lost If Other Grants Cover Cost
If you receive grant or scholarship aid from non-Federal sources that equals or exceeds your Cost of Attendance (COA) for the award year, you are ineligible for a Pell Grant for that period. If this happens, your school must either reduce the non‑Federal aid it controls or return/cancel any Pell Grant funds disbursed and stop future disbursements for that award year.
New Workforce Pell Grant Eligibility
A new Workforce Pell Grant lets students get Pell for short, job-focused programs that are at least 8 weeks but less than 15 weeks long and 150–599 clock hours (or equivalent credit hours). Programs must be approved by the State Governor and the Secretary of Education and meet annual outcome metrics before students can receive Workforce Pell.
Tuition Capped by Value-Added Earnings
An eligible workforce program’s published tuition and fees may not exceed the program’s value-added earnings, which the Department defines and will publish each year. The Secretary must publish the value-added earnings for a program no later than three months before the start of the award year.
Cap on Outside Providers in Workforce Programs
An ineligible organization may provide up to 25% of an eligible workforce program under a written arrangement; if the program is a Registered Apprenticeship related instruction component, an ineligible organization may provide more than 25% but less than 50%. The percentage is calculated by dividing credit/clock hours provided by the ineligible entity by the program total.
No Concurrent Pell Awards Allowed
Students may not receive concurrent Pell Grant awards for two or more different eligible programs; a student can only have one Pell award at a time for eligible programs (see Sec. 690.11).
Taxpayers Fund New Workforce Pell Costs
The Department will incur new costs to finance Pell Grants for eligible workforce programs, and taxpayers will bear the cost of that financing as Workforce Pell is funded as part of the existing Pell Grant Program. The Department and State governments will also incur implementation and monitoring costs if they choose to participate.
Programs With Zero/Negative Earnings Ineligible
If a program’s calculated value-added earnings are zero or negative, that program is not eligible for Workforce Pell and will lose eligibility for Pell Grant funding (see Sec. 690.95(e)).
Bachelor's Holders May Get Workforce Pell
An otherwise eligible student who already has a bachelor’s degree may receive a Pell Grant to enroll in an eligible workforce program under the new rules (see Sec. 690.6 amendment).
Graduate Credential Holders Disqualified
An individual who is enrolled in or accepted for enrollment in a program that leads to a graduate credential, or who has already attained a graduate credential, may not receive a Pell Grant to enroll in an eligible workforce program (see Sec. 668.32 amendment).
Remedial/Noncredit Not Counted Toward COA
For students in eligible workforce programs, institutions may not count noncredit, remedial, or reduced-credit remedial coursework outside required coursework (including ESL) when determining enrollment intensity and Cost of Attendance (COA) for that program (see Sec. 668.20 amendment).
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