Every time I try, I end up going down the same loop… google something, open 10 tabs, half of them are outdated, a few look sketchy and the rest I don't even qualify for. Next thing I know is 2 to 3 hours are gone and I haven't applied to a single thing.
I know scholarships are worth it, but the searching part is what drains me. It legit feels like a full time job before you even start applying.
I've tried a few different approaches so far:
Manually searching and bookmarking (takes forever)
Using random top scholarship lists (most are generic and super competitive)
Checking school/local ones (better, but limited options)
The only thing that kind of helped was finding a tool that filters scholarships based on your profile so you're not scrolling through irrelevant stuff. Made it easier to focus on ones I actually qualify for instead of wasting time.
But I still feel like there has to be a smarter system or routine people use.
Like do you batch it once a week, automate it somehow or only go for niche ones?
Curious what's actually working for people because right now this process feels way more exhausting than it should be.
What's the smartest way to find scholarships without wasting hours every day?
byu/Emergency_One_3557 inStudentLoans
Posted by Emergency_One_3557
3 Comments
Military had some decent scholarship databases when I was looking few years back – way less cluttered than civilian sites and actually filtered properly.
Look at local clubs:societies/organizations. They frequently have small scholarships to give out that next to no one applies for.
DAR, Lions Club, Elks Lodge, groups like that. Look at city, state, and regional chapters to see which scholarships they award.
Step zero is to find the most affordable path to earn your degree. The most generous multi year scholarships are typically from universities and state governments.