Charleston County families plan across a region with both heritage neighborhoods and major employers — and the same is true for college-bound seniors weighing college scholarships in 2026. With 415,000+ residents across 30 incorporated and unincorporated communities and Charleston County School District (CCSD), the local aid landscape looks different from what generic “Top 50” lists capture. We work with Charleston County families every week, and these are the ten programs we consistently come back to.

1. South Carolina LIFE Scholarship
South Carolina LIFE Scholarship — SC Commission on Higher Education sponsors this scholarship as part of its long-running commitment to South Carolina students.
Eligibility: SC residents attending eligible SC colleges; 3.0 HS GPA + 1100 SAT/24 ACT or top 30% class rank.
Award: Up to $5,000/year.
Deadline: FAFSA + enrollment-based.
Where to apply: Direct link goes to the LIFE Scholarship page on SC CHE. FAFSA + your college's financial aid office handle the actual application.
For students rooted across Charleston County's coastal corridor, from Awendaw to Edisto, SC Commission on Higher Education sits high on the list because Boeing and the local economy reward students who connect early with employers like this.
2. Palmetto Fellows Scholarship
Palmetto Fellows Scholarship — SC Commission on Higher Education sponsors this scholarship as part of its long-running commitment to South Carolina students.
Eligibility: SC residents; top academics (3.5+ GPA, 1200+ SAT/27+ ACT).
Award: $6,700 freshman year; $7,500 thereafter.
Deadline: December (early award) or June (late award).
Where to apply: Direct link goes to the Palmetto Fellows page. Apply through your high school counselor by the December deadline.
Within driving distance — or accessible online — for any Charleston County family, this opportunity stretches what a high schooler thinks is possible without uprooting the rest of their summer. 415,000+ residents across 30 incorporated and unincorporated communities means the applicant pool isn't always as big as parents fear.
3. South Carolina HOPE Scholarship
South Carolina HOPE Scholarship — SC Commission on Higher Education sponsors this scholarship as part of its long-running commitment to South Carolina students.
Eligibility: SC residents; 3.0 HS GPA.
Award: Up to $2,800 freshman year.
Deadline: FAFSA + enrollment-based.
Where to apply: Direct link goes to the HOPE Scholarship page. No separate application — eligibility is auto-determined when you enroll in an SC college.
Charleston County students consistently tell us the hardest part of applying is finding the time; SC Commission on Higher Education keeps the lift manageable by spelling out exactly what they want from candidates. Charleston County School District (CCSD) guidance counselors recognize this one.
4. South Carolina Tuition Grant
South Carolina Tuition Grant — South Carolina Tuition Grants Commission sponsors this scholarship as part of its long-running commitment to South Carolina students.
Eligibility: SC residents at private SC colleges; need-based.
Award: Up to $4,000/year.
Deadline: June 30 (FAFSA required).
Where to apply: From the homepage, navigate to How to Apply — FAFSA-based, no separate application form.
If you're rooted across Charleston County's coastal corridor, from Awendaw to Edisto and looking for something that actually counts on a college application, this one threads the needle between resume polish and genuine experience. College of Charleston and The Citadel pull strongly families tell us it shows up in admissions interviews.
5. South Carolina Need-Based Grant
South Carolina Need-Based Grant — SC Commission on Higher Education sponsors this scholarship as part of its long-running commitment to South Carolina students.
Eligibility: SC residents at SC public 4-year colleges; demonstrated need.
Award: Up to $3,500/year.
Deadline: FAFSA by April 1 (priority).
Where to apply: Direct link goes to the program page. FAFSA + your college's financial aid office.
Charleston County families weighing the math should pencil this in early — the deadline and eligibility don't budge once announced, and about 5,000 ccsd seniors graduate annually means application volume picks up fast.
6. South Carolina Bar Foundation Programs
South Carolina Bar Foundation Programs — South Carolina Bar Foundation sponsors this scholarship as part of its long-running commitment to South Carolina students.
Eligibility: SC HS seniors pursuing law-related fields.
Award: $1,000–$3,000.
Deadline: March 31.
Where to apply: From the homepage, navigate to Members → Sections → Young Lawyers Division → Scholarships.
For a Charleston County student already volunteering, this is the bridge from one-off service to the multi-year commitment admissions officers actually remember. Charleston kids tend to find their community here naturally.
7. Clemson University Scholarships (Bailey + Bridge)
Clemson University Scholarships (Bailey + Bridge) — Clemson University sponsors this scholarship as part of its long-running commitment to South Carolina students.
Eligibility: Top Clemson admits with strong leadership.
Award: Full tuition + room/board.
Deadline: December 1.
Where to apply: From the homepage, navigate to Financial Aid → Scholarships → University Scholarships.
Charleston County's Boeing sector means a student who shows up consistently at Clemson University gets noticed quickly — that compounds into recommendation letters when it counts.
8. South Carolina Education Lottery-Funded Aid
South Carolina Education Lottery-Funded Aid — SC Education Lottery sponsors this scholarship as part of its long-running commitment to South Carolina students.
Eligibility: SC residents (umbrella for the three flagship state scholarships).
Award: Funds LIFE, HOPE, Palmetto Fellows.
Deadline: via individual program.
Where to apply: Navigate to Beneficiaries → Education to see all funded scholarship programs.
Cost-of-attendance math for Charleston County families can swing $8,000 a year on financial aid alone; building toward this opportunity changes the affordability conversation entirely. Where Boeing's South Carolina assembly line and MUSC's research hospital co-exist with year-round tourism doesn't hurt either.
9. Horatio Alger South Carolina Scholarship
Horatio Alger South Carolina Scholarship — Horatio Alger Association sponsors this scholarship as part of its long-running commitment to South Carolina students.
Eligibility: SC HS seniors with financial need + adversity.
Award: $10,000.
Deadline: October 25.
Where to apply: Direct link goes to the SC state scholarship page — application opens August.
Even Charleston County students who think they're "not the type" for a program like this end up surprised — Horatio Alger Association isn't as gated as the name suggests, and 415,000+ residents across 30 incorporated and unincorporated communities works in candidates' favor.
10. Coca-Cola Scholars Program
Coca-Cola Scholars Program — Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation sponsors this scholarship as part of its long-running commitment to South Carolina students.
Eligibility: HS seniors; leadership focus.
Award: $20,000.
Deadline: October 31.
Where to apply: Direct link goes to the application portal — opens August each year.
Charleston County parents we work with frequently misjudge how competitive this one really is; the real bar is consistent follow-through, not perfect grades. Charleston County School District (CCSD) students who lean in early do best.
If you’re a student or parent rooted across Charleston County’s coastal corridor, from Awendaw to Edisto and trying to fit these college scholarships into a real college plan — application timeline, financial aid math, essay angles — the College Planning Center walks each family through it personally. We start with a free conversation about your goals, work backward from your target schools, and build a quarter-by-quarter plan that includes the strongest opportunities on this list for your situation. We see Charleston County students compete every year; we know what gets results here specifically.
Frequently asked questions
How much can a Charleston County student realistically expect to win?
Most families we work with land $4,000–$12,000 per year through state scholarships alone. Top-of-class students who stack a national award can push that to full-tuition coverage. With about 5,000 CCSD seniors graduate annually graduating each year in this area, the competition is real — but the biggest mistake is assuming you’re “not the type.” Apply broadly.
Can scholarships affect financial aid offers at Charleston County-area schools?
Sometimes yes — outside scholarships can reduce a college’s grant package dollar-for-dollar at need-meeting schools. For students considering College of Charleston and The Citadel pull strongly, we run the math with each family before submitting outside awards so there are no surprises in the spring.
What's the next step for a Charleston County family?
Make a list of the three programs from above that best fit your story, note every deadline on a single calendar, and book a free consultation so we can build a one-page application timeline you’ll actually follow. We work with families rooted across Charleston County’s coastal corridor, from Awendaw to Edisto and can sequence around your specific school’s calendar.
Do these scholarships work at out-of-state schools for Charleston County students?
The state-funded ones (LIFE, HOPE, Palmetto Fellows, SC Tuition Grant) require enrollment at eligible SC institutions, so they don’t follow you out of state. The national private programs (Coca-Cola, Gates, Cooke, Horatio Alger) do follow anywhere. Charleston County families weighing out-of-state options should lean harder on the national pool and on the colleges’ own merit aid.
Are scholarships taxable income for Charleston County families?
The portion that covers tuition, required fees, and books is generally tax-free. The portion that covers room, board, or stipends is taxable. Charleston County School District (CCSD) and the SC Department of Revenue both publish guidance; for awards over $5,000 we usually recommend a quick CPA conversation before tax season.



