Rhode Island Residency

Residency Policy

If you are applying as a graduate student or continuing education student, you need to contact the residency officer in enrollment services or the graduate school to which you are applying for information and applications that pertain to you. The residency policy and application on this page pertain only to incoming freshmen and undergraduate transfer students at our our main campus in Kingston.

 

Please read the policy below then download the Rhode Island Resident Application Form, complete it, and return it to the following address:

University of Rhode Island
Residency Officer
Admission
Newman Hall, 14 Upper College Road
Kingston, Rhode Island 02881-1310

Rhode Island Resident Application Form

 

Board of Governors for Higher Education State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
Adopted: 12/02/71 (BR) 07/02/1981 (BG)
Amended: 05/22/80 (BR) 04/16/1993 (BG)
09/27/1995 (BG)
01/15/1998 (BG)
06/30/2003 (BG)

S-5.1

A.    CHARGES FOR TUITION AND FEES

  1. A student who is a resident of the State of Rhode Island shall be classified as a "resident student" and shall pay tuition and fees prescribed by the Board of Governors for in-state students in public higher education.

    A student who is not a resident of the State of Rhode Island shall be classified as a "non-resident student" and shall pay tuition and fees prescribed by the Board of Governors for out-of-state students in public higher education.

  2. An international student who meets the following requirements to establish Rhode Island residency shall pay tuition and fees prescribed by the Board of Governors for in-state students:

    Individuals and their children who have been granted Temporary Protected Status* by the INS and who present evidence of being domiciled in Rhode Island for at least one year (until their status has been finally determined by the INS).

    Individuals and their children who have been granted Refugee Settlement Status* or Political Asylum* by the INS and who give evidence of being domiciled in Rhode Island for one year.

  3. Nothing in these regulations shall be construed to revoke, amend or otherwise affect any agreement relating to student tuition and fees now in effect or entered into in the future pursuant to the provisions of the New England Board of Higher Education Compact.

B.    DEFINITIONS

  1. For the purpose of determining in-state and out-of-state classifications, the word residency shall mean domicile:  the legal, documented, true and permanent home and place of habitation.  For the unemancipated student, the domicile will be that of the parents and/or guardians.  For the emancipated student, the domicile will be that of the student.

    A non-resident student who reaches 18 years of age while a student does not by virtue of that fact alone become a resident student.

    The ownership of real or personal property in the state and/or the payment of municipal and/or state taxes in Rhode Island and/or marriage to a Rhode Island resident shall be evidence of, but shall not alone, establish residency.

     

  2. The term, emancipated student, shall mean a student who has attained the age of 18 years and whose parents and/or guardians:
    1. have entirely surrendered the right to the care, custody and earnings of such student; and
    2. have not claimed the student as a dependent for tax purposes for two years; and
    3. do not provide regular financial assistance to the student; and
    4. whose income was not taken into account by any private or governmental agency furnishing financial education assistance to the student, including scholarships, loans, or otherwise.

    If any of the aforesaid tests are not met, the student shall be presumed to be   
    unemancipated.

S-5.2

C.    CRITERIA

  1. Unemancipated Students

    1. Any unemancipated student whose parents and/or guardians have been residents of the state for one year immediately preceding the first class day of the first semester of the student's registration in a public college or university shall be classified as a resident student as long as the parents and/or guardians continue to be residents of the state.

    2. Any unemancipated student who initially was classified as a non-resident student may thereafter obtain re-classification only if the student's parents and/or guardians establish and maintain residence in Rhode Island for a period of at least one year prior to the first class day of the semester for which the student seeks to be re-classified as a resident student.

    3. The residency of an unemancipated student, including those whose parents and/or guardians are divorced or legally separated, shall follow that of the parent or guardian who has legal custody or the parent or guardian who is responsible for the financial support of the student, whichever favors the student's request for resident student status.

    4. An unemancipated student under guardianship shall be required to present satisfactory documentary evidence of the appointment of the guardian in addition to a certification of the residency of the guardian, which shall be considered the residency of the student unless there are circumstances indicating that such guardianship was created primarily for the purpose of conferring resident student status on the student.

    5. An unemancipated student whose parent or guardian is a member of the Armed Forces and stationed in the state pursuant to military orders shall be entitled to the classification as a resident student during any semester the first class day of which is encompassed by the orders.
  2. Emancipated Students
    1. Any emancipated student may be classified as a resident student if the student meets the following tests:

      1. At the time of emancipation, the student's parents and/or guardians were residents of Rhode Island for one year immediately preceding the first class day of the first semester of the student's registration at a public college or university; or

      2. Having become emancipated, the student establishes and maintains residency in Rhode Island for one year immediately preceding the first day of the first semester of the student's registration at a public college or university; and

      3. The student does not hold residency in another state or foreign country; and

      4. The student is and continues to be a resident of Rhode Island.
    2. Any emancipated student who initially was classified as a non-resident student may thereafter obtain re-classification as a resident student only if the student establishes and maintains residency in Rhode Island for a period of at least one year prior to the first class day of the semester for which re-classification as a resident student is being sought.

    3. A student from another state or foreign country who is enrolled at a public college or university for more than six credits per semester shall be presumed to be in Rhode Island primarily for educational purposes and will be presumed to have not been a resident of the state during the time so enrolled.  Continued presence in Rhode Island during vacation periods or occasional interruptions in the course of study will not, of itself, overcome these presumptions.

    4. A member of the Armed Forces on active duty or his or her spouse stationed in the state on military orders shall be entitled to classification as a resident student during any semester the first class day of which is encompassed by the orders.

S-5.3

D.    PROCEDURES FOR INSTITUTIONS

  1. The institutional Residency Officer shall classify each person accepted by a public college or university as a resident or non-resident student.  Said classification shall be based upon all relevant information made available to the Residency Officer, including, but not limited to, information submitted by or on behalf of the student.  The Residency Officer may, as a condition of registration, require such written documents and other relevant evidence as are deemed necessary or helpful to determine the residence of the applicant.

  2. Any student who has been classified as a non-resident student and who claims that his or her status has changed during attendance at the institution may request the Residency Officer for a re-classification, submitting relevant evidence in support of this claim.

    Based upon relevant evidence, the institution may request the Residency Officer to re-classify a student, if the student's status has changed during attendance at the institution.

    If the Residency Officer determines that the student has become a resident, the student shall be classified as a resident student effective as of the beginning of the semester next following the determination.  Decisions on classification will be communicated to the student in written form.  Requests for a change of classification will not be considered more than once in any semester.

  3. Any student who is classified as a non-resident student by the Residency Officer may, by filing a written request with the Residency Officer within thirty days of receipt of notification of the classification, appeal the Residency Officer's decision to the Board of Residency Review.  The Residency Officer shall thereupon transmit the record together with such additional written information as the student may furnish or the board may require.  The Board of Residency Review shall hold an informal hearing.  The Decision of the Board of Residency Review shall be final.

E.    PENALTIES

    Misrepresentation of facts in order to qualify for resident student classification shall be considered cause for the recapture of back-due tuition and/or for suspension or permanent exclusion from a public college or university.  Moreover, it may subject the student to criminal prosecution.


 

*Temporary Protected Status is granted by the Immigration and Naturalization Service to individuals who were forced to leave their native land because of political upheaval, severe economic hardship or natural disaster.  People with this status often receive work permits.  TPS is subject to renewal by the INS every eighteen months.

*Refugee Settlement Status is given to those individuals who were admitted into the United States as refugees through the United Nations Higher Commission for Refugees.  People in this category often come to the United States from refugee resettlement camps in another country.  On occasion refugee resettlement status is granted directly to individuals by the United States government.  Once an individual takes “residency” in the United States, the process of applying for a green card begins and can last for several years.

*Political Asylum is granted by the INS to those individuals who fear being prosecuted if they return to their native country.  Asylum, which is granted on a permanent basis, leads to an individual eventually
being granted his/her green card.  There is usually a 9-10 year wait between granting of asylum and the receipt of a green card.