The Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) was launched in 2014 with the goal of measuring the column-averaged dry-air mole fraction of carbon dioxide (X-CO2) with sufficient precision and accuracy to infer regional carbon sources and sinks. One of the primary sources of error in near-infrared measurements of X-CO2 is the scattering effects of cloud and aerosol layers. In this work, we study the impact of ingesting better informed aerosol priors from the Goddard Earth Observing System Model, Version 5 (GEOS-5) into the OCO-2 ACOS V8 retrieval algorithm with the objective of reducing the error in X-CO2 from real measurements. Multiple levels of both aerosol setup complexity and uncertainty on the aerosol priors were tested, ranging from a mostly unconstrained aerosol optical depth (AOD) setup to ingesting full aerosol profiles with high confidence. We find that using co-located GEOS-5 aerosol types and AODs with low uncertainty results in a small improvement in the retrieved X-CO2 against the Total Carbon Column Observing Network relative to V8. In contrast, attempting to use modeled vertical information in the aerosol prior to improve the X-CO2 retrieval generally gives poor results, as aerosol models struggle with the vertical placement of aerosol layers. To assess regional differences in X-CO2, we compare our results to a global CO2 model validation suite. We find that the GEOS-5 setup performs better than V8 over northern Africa and central Asia, with the standard deviation of the X-CO2 error reduced from 2.12 to 1.83 ppm, due to a combination of smaller prior AODs and lower prior uncertainty. In general, the use of better informed aerosol priors shows promise but may be restricted by the current accuracy of aerosol models.