Current:Home > FinanceCollege will cost up to $95,000 this fall. Schools say it’s OK, financial aid can numb sticker shock -QuantumFunds
College will cost up to $95,000 this fall. Schools say it’s OK, financial aid can numb sticker shock
View
Date:2025-04-22 03:48:01
MEREDITH, N.H. (AP) — As more than 2 million graduating high school students from across the United States finalize their decisions on what college to attend this fall, many are facing jaw-dropping costs — in some cases, as much as $95,000.
A number of private colleges — some considered elite and others middle-of-the-pack — have exceeded the $90,000 threshold for the first time this year as they set their annual costs for tuition, board, meals and other expenses. That means a wealthy family with three children could expect to shell out more than $1 million by the time their youngest child completes a four-year degree.
But the sticker price tells only part of the story. Many colleges with large endowments have become more focused in recent years on making college affordable for students who aren’t wealthy. Lower-income families may be required to pay just 10% of the advertised rate and, for some, attending a selective private college can turn out to be cheaper than a state institution.
“Ninety thousand dollars clearly is a lot of money, and it catches people’s attention, for sure,” said Phillip Levine, a professor of economics at Wellesley College near Boston. “But for most people, that is not how much they’re going to pay. The existence of a very generous financial aid system lowers that cost substantially.”
Wellesley is among the colleges where the costs for wealthy students will exceed $90,000 for the first time this fall, with an estimated price tag of $92,000. But the institution points out that nearly 60% of its students will receive financial aid, and the average amount of that aid is more than $62,000, reducing their costs by two-thirds.
But many prospective students this year are facing significant delays and anxiety in finding out how much aid they will be offered by colleges due to major problems with the rollout of a new U.S. Department of Education online form that was supposed to make applying for federal aid easier. Many colleges rely on information from the form for determining their own aid offers to students.
“The rollout has been pure chaos and an absolute disaster,” said Mark Kantrowitz, a financial aid expert.
As well as repeated delays and glitches, he said, there have been other problems with the new system including more stringent requirements for proof of identity from parents, which is deterring thousands of eligible but undocumented parents from applying — even though their children are U.S. citizens and entitled to aid.
Kantrowitz said that if the significant drop in people applying for aid under the new system persists, it could result in lower enrollments and even force some institutions to close.
Levine said his research has shown that the amount lower-income students are paying at elite institutions has actually been declining over the past six years. But he worries that sticker shock will put off some students from even applying to institutions like Wellesley.
“People should be making educational decisions based on the actual cost they have to pay, not their perceived cost,” Levine said. “The problem is that the sticker price is the easiest number to know. It gets the most attention.”
Aside from Wellesley, some of the other colleges with sticker prices of more than $90,000 this year include the University of Southern California at $95,000, Harvey Mudd College in California at $93,000, the University of Pennsylvania at $92,000, Brown University in Rhode Island at $92,000, Dartmouth College in New Hampshire at $91,000, and Boston University at $90,000.
Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, puts its cost of attendance this fall at up to $91,000, but makes the point that the average parent contribution is just $13,000, and almost a quarter of families pay nothing at all. Harvard can afford a particularly generous student aid program because it has an endowment worth more than $50 billion, the largest of any university.
The sticker prices don’t always provide apples-to-apples comparisons because some colleges include costs like health insurance and travel expenses, while others don’t. And some colleges that last year had sticker prices of close to $90,000, including Columbia University in New York and the University of Chicago, have yet to reveal this year’s expected costs.
In its most recent analysis, the College Board estimated the average advertised costs for private nonprofit colleges last year were $60,000, compared to about $29,000 for students at public in-state institutions and $47,000 at public out-of-state institutions.
Kantrowitz said the average unmet need for students at four-year colleges is about $10,000 per year.
“So families are forced to borrow that money or come up with that money from some other source, and that’s on top of their share of college costs,” he said.
So is college a good investment?
Kantrowitz believes the answer is yes, so long as students borrow in moderation and complete their studies.
“If you graduate and you don’t take on a ridiculous amount of debt, you should be able to repay that debt in a reasonable amount of time,” Kantrowitz said. “But if you drop out, you have the debt, but not the degree that can help you repay the debt.”
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- The 2023 Soros Arts Fellows plan to fight climate change and other global issues with public art
- UAW strikes at General Motors SUV plant in Texas as union begins to target automakers’ cash cows
- Israel is preparing for a new front in the north: Reporter's notebook
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- New details emerge after off-duty pilot allegedly tried to shut off engines on flight
- Dwayne The Rock Johnson wants Paris museum to change the skin color of his new wax figure
- Global shift to clean energy means fossil fuel demand will peak soon, IEA says
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- 6,800 UAW members ordered to join strike at Stellantis' Sterling Heights Assembly Plant
Ranking
- Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
- Chevron buys Hess Corporation for $53 billion, another acquisition in oil, gas industry
- Britney Spears Reveals the Real Story Behind Her 55-Hour Marriage to Jason Alexander
- Extremists with ties to the Islamic State group kill at least 26 people in eastern Congo
- See you latte: Starbucks plans to cut 30% of its menu
- Mideast scholar Hussein Ibish: Israelis and Palestinians must stop dehumanizing each other
- Washington state senator Jeff Wilson arrested in Hong Kong for gun possession and granted bail
- 6,800 UAW members ordered to join strike at Stellantis' Sterling Heights Assembly Plant
Recommendation
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
AP PHOTOS: Thousands attend a bullfighting competition in Kenya despite the risk of being gored
Minnesota judge, in rare move, rejects guilty plea that would have spared man of prison time
Next ‘Mission: Impossible’ delayed a year as actors strike drags on
As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
Detroit officials approve spending nearly $14 million in federal dollars on inflatable dome
Vikings vs. 49ers Monday Night Football highlights: Minnesota pulls off upset
Hungary in the spotlight after Turkey presses on with Sweden’s bid to join NATO