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The College Opportunity Fund is the process by which the Colorado Legislature provides state financial support to eligible undergraduate students for higher education. It was created by an Act of the Colorado State Legislature and signed into law by Governor Owens in May 2004.
In the past, the state gave money directly to the institution. Now, when you apply and authorize use of the stipend for any given term, the college or university you are attending will receive the funding, and you will see it appear as a credit on your tuition bill.
Then, you’ll actually pay your entire tuition bill. The state has put aside this money for you. If you don’t use it, you will pay more tuition than students who take advantage of the stipend.
Undergraduate students who are eligible for in-state tuition, and who apply, are admitted, and enrolled at a state or participating private institution of higher education.
It will vary. The amount will be determined each year by the Colorado Legislature. For the academic year 2024-2025 it is $116.00 per credit hour for full-time students at public institutions.
Go to http://hmt.umlstudy.net/bursar/ to review current MSU Denver tuition. Select tuition, dates & deadlines.
You can apply for your stipend online at http://cof.college-assist.org/. You only have to apply once, and you will receive the stipend every term that you register for eligible undergraduate courses, authorize for that given term and have not met your 145 credit hour life time limit.
The College Opportunity Fund will pay for up-to a total of 145 credit hours towards your Bachelor degree. Ongoing, you can check your specific credit hour account balance at the COF website: http://cof.college-assist.org/.
You should check the COF website for your specific credit hour account balance at least once a semester. You may also call College Access Network at 720-264-8550 or 1-800-777-2757.
If you exceed the 145 credit hour limit, you have the right to request an institutional waiver for up to one year. Institutional COF Waiver
Reach out to the Residency Team within the Office of Admissions at [email protected] to see if you qualify for a tuition classification status change.
Yes. After you’ve registered for your first semester classes, you must choose to authorize or decline the stipend. You can follow the steps to authorize the COF stipend here. Remember, if you do not authorize the COF stipend to be applied to your tuition, you will be responsible for total tuition without stipend.
Review the difference of the stipend amount at
Certain classes have not been eligible for COF dollars including Basic Skills, English as a Second Language and the majority of Extended Campus classes including Surveying and Mapping, and Graduate courses.
Since FALL 2006 the following classes have been eligible for COF:
MSU Denver North: Behavioral Science, Professional Elementary Education Licensure.
MSU Denver South: Accounting, Behavioral Science, Computer Information Systems, Hospitality, Meeting, Travel Administration, and Management.
Yes, COF allows an additional 30 credit hours beyond the first degree using COF dollars.
If you do not have a Social Security Number or a Permanent Resident Number you are able to apply for COF funding through a revised paper application available on the COF website (http://cof.college-assist.org/)
You will check a box on the form saying that you have neither identification number. The COF computer system will generate a number that you will receive back in the mail from CCHE and will need to take to the Office of the Registrar, Central Classroom Building, room 105 at MSU Denver.
The university will use this computer-generated number when requesting funding on your behalf. All COF-generated numbers will be audited by the State of Colorado. Only students who don’t have an SSN or Permanent Resident Number need to complete a paper application at this time.
Graduate level courses do not qualify for COF. You will not receive a COF stipend for course numbers at a 5000 level.
Graduate students to do not qualify for COF. You will not receive a COF stipend for undergraduate if you are attending as a graduate student.
Because of the funding process under COF, students must be officially registered with the university for classes.
Officially registered means that students have been accepted for admission by the university, are eligible to register for classes, and that the Course Reference Number (CRN) for the class is entered on the student’s registration record maintained by the Office of the Registrar.
The deadline to register is located on the University Academic Calendar.
There are pro-rated deadlines for part-of-term classes. It is the students’ responsibility to attend only those classes for which they are officially registered. Students who fail to register officially for a class are academically and financially responsible for any consequences of late registration, such as appeals, approvals, denials, availability of a seat in the class, availability of the class, and payment of full in-state tuition.