I built CounselorAI for the people who help students. The fastest path to a good outcome is usually: bring your award letters, FAFSA questions, and changed circumstances to your school counselor or financial aid advisor, and ask them to walk through it with you. If they use CounselorAI, they can do that work faster. If they don't, ask whether they would. If you do not have a counselor you can reach, the tools below are designed to help you get further on your own without making the kind of mistakes I made when I was a first-gen student trying to figure this out without help.
Counselors carry hundreds of students. They are not slow because they don't care; they are slow because the paperwork never stops. CounselorAI cuts the drafting time on appeals, recommendations, and award-letter reviews from hours to minutes, which means a counselor who uses it can get to more students with the same level of care. Bringing your situation to your counselor with the question "could you use a tool like CounselorAI to help me with this?" is often the fastest way to get a result you trust.
How to ask your counselor:
This is the situation I grew up in. My mom did not have a counselor to walk her through any of this, and the cost of that gap was real. If you are in that situation now, the tools below can help you get further on your own. They are not a substitute for a real counselor, but they will keep you from making the most expensive mistakes. Each tool runs in your browser; nothing is saved unless you download it.
Most parents arrive here in one of three moments. Pick the one that matches you. Bring whatever you produce to a counselor, advisor, or community college aid office before you send anything important.
Tool inputs are sent to Anthropic's API to generate output and are not stored by CounselorAI or used to train models. They do leave your browser, which is true of any online aid tool. For the most sensitive information (Social Security numbers, full tax data), do not enter the literal numbers, use ranges or rounded figures. The aid calculator and FAFSA checklist are designed to work with general inputs, not exact federal data.
Aid offices receive thousands of appeals every year and the volume is growing. What matters to a reader is whether the letter contains specific facts (dollar amounts, dates, documentation references) and a specific ask. CounselorAI drafts in the structure aid offices recognize. It does not write florid prose that signals AI. Your job (or your counselor's job, if they're using it for you) is to review the draft, replace any generic phrasing with your real specifics, and attach actual documentation. A well-drafted appeal letter using these tools is indistinguishable from a well-drafted appeal letter written from scratch.
That is the norm, not the exception. The average high school counselor in the U.S. carries 300 to 500 students. Most are doing the best they can with no time. Two things that help: (1) Come to your counselor with a specific ask and the materials they need, not an open-ended question. "Can you review this draft appeal?" is faster to answer than "What should we do?" (2) Mention CounselorAI by name and ask if they would use it for your child's appeal or recommendation. A counselor who uses it can serve you in 15 minutes instead of three hours, which is sometimes the difference between getting help and not.
ChatGPT is a general-purpose chat assistant. CounselorAI is purpose-built for the specific documents and decisions in the college financial aid and admissions process. The appeal letter tool knows the four legitimate appeal grounds and structures the letter accordingly. AwardLens knows what a renewal condition looks like in actual award letter language. The FAFSA checklist knows what triggers verification and which states have early deadlines. You'd get something serviceable from ChatGPT; CounselorAI gets you to a useful starting draft faster, with fewer omissions.
Public university aid is more constrained than private university aid, because state funding formulas are largely fixed. A "competing offer" appeal at a state university is much less likely to succeed than the same appeal at a private university. A "changed circumstances" appeal, meaning the family's actual financial picture has changed since FAFSA was filed, is appealable everywhere because it falls under Professional Judgment authority granted to all financial aid officers under federal law (HEA §479A). Use the appeal type selector in the tool to match your real situation.
Every tool offers free trials with no credit card required. If your family ends up using the tools heavily, a typical appeal cycle might be 5–8 letter drafts and revisions across multiple schools, there is a paid Pro plan for unlimited use. The free trials are generally enough for one student's appeal-and-decision crunch.
The most useful thing you can do is hand this site to your counselor or aid advisor. If they use it, you get help faster. If they don't, the tools are still here for you. No credit card required.