Metadata
Title
Types of Funding
Category
scholarships
UUID
1698fe7118874d3aae8b9dfccaf6b1d2
Source URL
https://grad.illinois.edu/funding/types-funding
Parent URL
https://grad.illinois.edu/admissions/application-instructions
Crawl Time
2026-03-16T06:17:37+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

Types of Funding

Source: https://grad.illinois.edu/funding/types-funding Parent: https://grad.illinois.edu/admissions/application-instructions

Graduate College Funding Types of Funding

Types of Funding

Most graduate students fund their years of graduate study not through a single funding source but through multiple sources. Listed below are the most common sources of funding. For additional details, visit “Funding Graduate School” in our GradLIFE blog.

Assistantships

Assistantships entail performing work in exchange for a stipend. Assistantships are provided in terms of percentage of full-time effort (“FTE”), and they range from 1% to 100% FTE, with the most common being 50% FTE (20 hours/week).  Tuition waivers are generally provided for assistantships that are between 25% and 67% FTE.

There are four kinds of assistantships:

Most assistantships are awarded through your home department. The Assistantship Clearinghouse lists some additional assistantship opportunities.

Learn more about assistantships.

Fellowships

Fellowships are competitively awarded funding packages that officially do not require work in exchange for a stipend. Instead, fellowships generally allow the awardee the freedom to devote 100% of his/her time to research and coursework. Fellowships usually pay a generous stipend, and if that stipend is $10,000 or greater, the awardee may become eligible for a tuition waiver (waivers are not available to students in cost-recovery and self-supporting programs).

Fellowships are divided into two categories, depending on their source:

Learn more about fellowships.

Extracurricular Employment

Some students may wish to work in more traditional positions either on campus or off campus. See the listing of campus job boards.

Loans

Private loans and unsubsidized federal loans are available to graduate students. Students pursuing loans should consult with the Office of Student Financial Aid.

Learn more about student loans.