Students enrolled in eligible short-term job training programs will be able to access federal Pell Grants beginning July 1, 2026, under a new initiative aimed at helping workers prepare for high-demand careers, The Washington Post reports.
The workforce Pell Grants program expands federal financial aid eligibility beyond traditional degree programs to certain training courses that can be completed in as few as eight weeks. The initiative was authorized through the Working Families Tax Cuts Act, which President Donald Trump signed into law on July 4, 2025.
Eligible programs include training in fields such as nursing, commercial truck driving, welding, child care, and heating, ventilation, and air conditioning repair. Participating programs must demonstrate strong completion rates, positive earnings outcomes, and alignment with workforce needs to maintain eligibility, according to the U.S. Department of Education.
The department issued final regulations for the program on May 18, 2026, allowing colleges and training providers to begin offering approved programs ahead of the July rollout.
Education leaders said awareness remains a challenge as institutions prepare for implementation.
“There’s a huge awareness gap,” Devin Purgason, associate vice president of student experience, marketing, and outreach at Forsyth Technical Community College in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, told The Hechinger Report.
A survey conducted by education technology company Ellucian found that fewer than half of prospective students interested in nondegree programs were aware that financial aid may be available for short-term workforce training.
State agencies are responsible for determining which programs meet federal requirements, a process that higher education organizations say could prove complex as the initiative expands nationwide.
Supporters say the program could increase access to career training and help address workforce shortages. Critics have raised concerns that inadequate oversight could allow low-performing programs, particularly at some for-profit institutions, to receive federal funding.
Additional guidance on program eligibility and implementation is expected from the U.S. Department of Education before the program launches July 1.
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