| Residency
Classification of Residents and Nonresidents for
Admission and Tuition Purposes
These criteria are contained in the Policy Manual,
Board of Regents, State of Iowa and or the Iowa Administrative Code:
Board of Regents, State of Iowa.
Graduate Assistants
Students with graduate assistantships of 1/4-time
or more are assessed Iowa resident tuition and fees. Nonresident
students with graduate assistantships of 1/4-time or more retain
their nonresidency classification, but are assessed resident tuition
and fees as long as the graduate assistantship is continued.
The spouse of a 1/4-time or more graduate assistant
who is a nonresident is eligible for resident tuition and fees during
the period of the assistantship appointment. Iowa residency is not
granted, but a waiver of nonresident tuition and fees is in effect.
When the graduate assistantship ends, the tuition and fee waiver
for the spouse is terminated. (Board of Regents, State of Iowa,
Minutes March 15, 1995, p. 801)
General
A. A person enrolling at one of the three
state universities shall be classified as a resident or nonresident
for admission, tuition, and fee purposes by the registrar or someone
designated by the registrar. The decision shall be based upon information
furnished by the student and other relevant information.
B. In determining resident or nonresident classification,
the issue is essentially one of why the person is in the state of
Iowa. If the person is in the state primarily for educational purposes,
that person will be considered a nonresident. For example, it may
be possible that an individual could qualify as a resident of Iowa
for such purposes as voting, or holding an Iowa driver's license,
and not meet the residency requirements as established by the Board
of Regents, State of Iowa, for admission, tuition, and fee purposes.
C. The registrar, or designated person, is
authorized to require written documents, affidavits, verifications,
or other evidence deemed necessary to determine why a student is
in Iowa. The burden of establishing that a student is in Iowa for
other than educational purposes is upon the student. A student may
be required to file any or all of the following:
1. A statement from the student describing employment
and expected source of support
2. A statement from the student's employer
3. A statement from the student's parents verifying nonsupport and
the fact that the student was not listed as a dependent on tax returns
for the past year and will not be so listed in future years
4. Supporting statements from persons who might be familiar with
the family situation
5. Iowa state income tax return.
D. Change of classification from nonresident
to resident will not be made retroactive beyond the term in which
application for resident classification is made.
E. A student who gives incorrect or misleading
information to evade payment of nonresident fees shall be subject
to serious disciplinary action and must also pay the nonresident
fees for each term previously attended.
F. Review committee. These regulations shall
be administered by the registrar or someone designated by the registrar.
The decision of the registrar or designated person may be appealed
to a university review committee. The finding of the review committee
may be appealed to the Board of Regents, State of Iowa.
Guidelines
The following guidelines are used in determining
the resident classification of a student for admission, tuition,
and fee purposes:
A. A financially dependent student whose parents
move from Iowa after the student is enrolled remains a resident
provided the student maintains continuous enrollment. A financially
dependent student whose parents move from Iowa during the senior
year of high school will be considered a resident provided the student
has not established domicile in another state.
B. In deciding why a person is in the state
of Iowa, the person's domicile will be considered. A person who
comes to Iowa from another state and enrolls in any institution
of postsecondary education for a full program or substantially a
full program shall be presumed to have come to Iowa primarily for
educational reasons rather than to establish a domicile in Iowa.
C. A student who was a former resident of Iowa
may continue to be considered a resident provided absence from the
state was for a period of less than 12 months and provided domicile
is reestablished. If the absence from the state is for a period
exceeding 12 months, a student may be considered a resident if evidence
can be presented showing that the student has long-term ties to
Iowa and reestablishes an Iowa domicile. A person or the dependent
of a person whose domicile is permanently established in Iowa, who
has been classified as a resident for admission, tuition, and fee
purposes, may continue to be classified as a resident so long as
domicile is maintained, even though circumstances may require extended
absence of the person from the state. It is required that a person
who claims Iowa domicile while living in another state or country
will provide proof of the continual domicile as evidence that the
person:
1. Has not acquired domicile in another state;
2. Has maintained a continuous voting record in Iowa; and
3. Has filed regular Iowa resident income tax returns during absence
from the state.
D. A student who moves to Iowa may be eligible
for resident classification at the next registration following 12
consecutive months in the state provided the student is not enrolled
as more than a half-time student (6 credits for an undergraduate
or professional student, 5 credits for a graduate student) in any
academic year term, is not enrolled for more than 4 credits in a
summer term for any classification, and provides sufficient evidence
of the establishment of an Iowa domicile.
E. A student who has been a continuous student
and whose parents move to Iowa
may become a resident at the beginning of the next term provided
the student is dependent upon the parents for a majority of financial
assistance.
F. A person who is moved into the state as
the result of military or civil orders from the government for other
than educational purposes, or the dependent of such a person, is
entitled to resident status. However, if the arrival of the person
under orders is subsequent to the beginning of the term in which
the student is first enrolled, nonresident fees will be charged
in all cases until the beginning of the next term in which the student
is enrolled. Legislation, effective July 1, 1977, requires that
military personnel who claim residency in Iowa (home of record)
will be required to file Iowa resident income tax returns.
G. A person who has been certified as a refugee
or granted asylum by the appropriate agency of the United States,
who enrolls as a student at a university governed by the Board of
Regents, State of Iowa, may be accorded immediate resident status
for admission, tuition, and fee purposes where the person:
1. Comes directly to the state of Iowa from a refugee
facility or port of debarkation, or
2. Comes to the state of Iowa within a reasonable time and has not
established domicile in another state.
Any refugee or individual granted asylum not meeting
these standards will be presumed to be a nonresident for admission,
tuition, and fee purposes and thus subject to the usual method of
proof of establishment of Iowa residency.
H. An alien who has immigrant status establishes
Iowa residency in the same manner as a United States citizen.
I. At the Regent institutions, American Indians
who have origins in any of the original people of North America
and who maintain a cultural identification through tribal affiliation
or community recognition with one or more of the tribes or nations
connected historically with the present state of Iowa, including
the Iowa, Kickapoo, Menominee, Miami, Missouri, Ojibwa (Chippewa),
Omaha, Otoe, Ottawa (Odawa), Potawatomi, Sac and Fox (Sauk, Meskwaki),
Sioux, and Winnebago (Ho Chunk), will be assessed Iowa resident
tuition and fees. (Board of Regents, State of Iowa, Minutes October
15-16, 1997, p. 299)
Facts
A. The following circumstances, although
not necessarily conclusive, have probative value in support of a
claim for resident classification:
1. Reside in Iowa for 12 consecutive months, and be
primarily engaged in activities other than those of a full-time
student, immediately prior to the beginning of the term for which
resident classification is sought.
2. Reliance upon Iowa resources for financial support.
3. Domicile in Iowa of persons legally responsible for the student.
4. Former domicile in the state and maintenance of significant connections
therein while absent.
5. Acceptance of an offer of permanent employment in Iowa.
6. Other facts indicating the student's domicile will be considered
by the universities in classifying the student.
B. The following circumstances, standing alone,
do not constitute sufficient evidence of domicile to affect classification
of a student as a resident under these regulations:
1. Voting or registration for voting.
2. Employment in any position normally filled by a student.
3. The lease of living quarters.
4. Admission to a licensed practicing profession in Iowa.
5. Automobile registration.
6. Public records; for example, birth and marriage records, Iowa
driver's license.
7. Continuous presence in Iowa during periods when not enrolled
in school.
8. Ownership of property in Iowa, or the payment of Iowa taxes.
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