Log In

The top private and public colleges for financial aid

Published 11 hours ago3 minute read

Paying for college: What to know about 529 plans

The federal student loan system is facing a massive overhaul, which could result in less college aid. But higher education is only getting more expensive.

To bridge the gap, some schools are offering substantial financial aid packages, according to The Princeton Review.

College tuition has surged by 5.6% a year, on average, since 1983, significantly outpacing other household expenses, a recent study by J.P. Morgan Asset Management found.

For the 2024-25 school year, tuition and fees plus room and board for a four-year private college averaged $58,600, up from $56,390 a year earlier, according to the College Board. At four-year, in-state public colleges, it was $24,920, up from $24,080.

And yet, the Trump administration's budget proposal for fiscal 2026 calls for scaling back financial aid, including reducing the maximum federal Pell Grant award to $5,710 a year from $7,395, as well as curbing the federal work-study program. The proposed cuts would help pay for the landmark tax and spending bill Republicans in the U.S. Congress hope to enact.


Trump aims to slash Pell Grants
Is college still worth it? It is for most, but not all
What to know before you tap your 529 plan

"Inflation and cuts in federal and state spending are causing schools to increase tuition, in some cases dramatically," said Robert Franek, editor in chief of The Princeton Review.

However, "it's really not what colleges are charging that matters, it is what actual students and families are paying after scholarships and grants are deducted — that's what students and their parents need to focus on," Franek said.

Grants are considered the most desirable kind of financial assistance because they typically do not need to be repaid. "Grants are the magic word," Franek said.

Among the top five private schools on The Princeton Review's list, the average sticker price — including tuition and fees plus room and board — was around $90,000 in 2024-25. The average scholarship grant awarded to students with need was more than $66,000. 

Williams College

John Greim | LightRocket | Getty Images


Location: Williamstown, Massachusetts
Sticker price: $90,750
Average need-based scholarship: $74,113
Average total out-of-pocket cost: $16,637


Location: Pasadena, California
Sticker price: $86,181
Average need-based scholarship: $71,378
Average total out-of-pocket cost: $14,803


Location: New Haven, Connecticut
Sticker price: $87,150
Average need-based scholarship: $69,164
Average total out-of-pocket cost: $17,986


Location: Portland, Oregon
Sticker price: $87,010
Average need-based scholarship: $50,413
Average total out-of-pocket cost: $36,597


Location: Claremont, California
Sticker price: $91,134
Average need-based scholarship: $67,027
Average total out-of-pocket cost: $24,107

Among the five public schools on this list, the average scholarship grant awarded in 2023-24 to students with need was more than $20,000.  

People walk on the campus of the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill on June 29, 2023 in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

Eros Hoagland | Getty Images


Location: Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Sticker price (in-state): $24,134
Average need-based scholarship: $19,921
Average total out-of-pocket cost: $4,213


Location: Sarasota, Florida
Sticker price (in-state): $20,271
Average need-based scholarship: $16,483
Average total out-of-pocket cost: $3,788


Location: Ann Arbor, Michigan
Sticker price (in-state): $34,176
Average need-based scholarship: $26,860
Average total out-of-pocket cost: $7,316


Location: Charlottesville, Virginia
Sticker price (in-state): $40,313
Average need-based scholarship: $27,233
Average total out-of-pocket cost: $13,080


Location: Kirksville, Missouri
Sticker price (in-state): $23,076
Average need-based scholarship: $10,889
Average total out-of-pocket cost: $12,187

Origin:
publisher logo
CNBC
Loading...
Loading...

You may also like...