A minor change to the Office of Federal Student Aid branding on studentaid.gov sparked questions about a larger policy move: the Trump administration’s plan to transfer substantial portions of FSA operations and oversight from the Department of Education to the Department of the Treasury. The story highlights a change to the FSA website logo and notes that it appears in a context where interagency agreements—first disclosed in March—are already being used as the justification. Department of Education spokesperson Ellen Keast described the update as “a website glitch,” pointing to other FSA pages that retained the older header and disputing the premise that a change was underway. The operational significance for higher ed is that any reallocation of student-aid functions can affect program administration, processing workflows, vendor relationships, and communications with schools and students. Even where officials characterize the observed change as cosmetic, the moment underscores sensitivity around governance changes to financial aid systems. For campus financial-aid leaders, the near-term focus should be operational: confirm that no functional changes are occurring behind the scenes and watch for process guidance that affects Pell, FAFSA processing, and repayment operations.