FERPA is your privacy right at college. Here's who can see your records, how to inspect and fix them, parent access, and step-by-step request templates.
FERPA (the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act) protects your education records at most U.S. colleges. This 2025 guide explains your right to inspect records, request corrections, control disclosure, opt out of directory information, and when colleges can share information without your permission. Use the checklists and templates to take action fast. Yes, if they receive federal funds (most do). Truly unfunded institutions are uncommon. Yes—unless you waived your right of access when you requested the recommendation (common on application forms). Schools must protect PII; many use secure portals. Grade emails without proper safeguards are typically avoided. Complaints generally must be filed within a set period from the alleged violation. Check your school’s FERPA page for specifics and SPPO instructions. Note: This guide is for educational purposes and is not legal advice. For case-specific questions, contact your registrar or student privacy office. Written by TCM StaffYour 2025 FERPA Guide: Student Privacy, Records Access & Consent
FERPA Basics (2025)
What counts as an “education record”
When rights transfer to you
Your Core Rights Under FERPA
1) Inspect & review records
2) Request an amendment
3) Control disclosure
4) File a complaint
Directory Information & Opt-Out (2025)
What schools may treat as “directory”
How to protect directory info
When Schools Can Share Without Your Consent
Common FERPA exceptions (summary)
Recipient / Reason Allowed Disclosure? Notes School officials with a legitimate educational interest Yes Faculty, advisors, financial aid/billing staff, IT—only as needed for their job Another school where you seek or intend to enroll Yes Transcripts and records may be sent to facilitate transfer/enrollment Financial aid purposes Yes Determining eligibility, amounts, conditions, or enforcing aid terms Health & safety emergencies Yes Information needed to protect you or others from an imminent threat Dependent students (for IRS purposes) Often Schools may disclose to parents of a dependent student; policies vary—ask your registrar Alcohol/drug violations under age 21 Often Schools may notify parents/guardians Subpoenas/court orders Yes Typically with notice to the student unless order says otherwise Accreditors, audits, studies for the institution Yes Under strict data-use agreements/conditions Public release of directory information Yes Unless you have a directory opt-out on file Parent/Guardian Access After You Start College
What changes at college
How to share on your terms
Take Action: Requests & Templates
How to request to inspect your records
Sample request (copy/paste)
Subject: FERPA Request to Inspect Education Records
To the Records/Registrar Office,
Under FERPA, I request to inspect and review my education records.
Please confirm the process and timeline. I am specifically requesting:
• [e.g., Academic transcript and advising notes]
• [e.g., Conduct file for 2023–2025]
• [e.g., Financial aid and billing records]
Name: [Your Full Name]
Student ID: [ID]
Program: [Major/Level]
Preferred contact: [Email/Phone]
Thank you,
[Your Name]
Amending Errors vs. Disagreeing with Opinions
When amendment works
When it won’t
FERPA vs HIPAA & Campus Health Records
Who covers what
Security, Data Use & Practical Tips (2025)
Protect your data
Annual notice
Quick Myths vs Facts
Set the record straight
Fact: Not without your consent or a FERPA exception.
Fact: You can consent to a detailed reference; without consent, they can still write general references that don’t disclose protected records.
Fact: Schools may share with institutions where you seek to enroll.FAQ: FERPA in 2025
Does FERPA apply to private colleges?
Can I see recommendation letters?
Can my school email grades?
Is there a deadline to complain?