College Scholarships & Financial Aid Guide

The published tuition at most top universities is not what you'll pay. After financial aid, merit scholarships, and grants, the real cost is often 50–70% less than the sticker price. Here's how to figure out what you'll actually pay.

How College Scholarships Work

There are three main types of college financial aid. Understanding the difference is the first step to minimizing what you pay:

TypeBased OnRepay?How to Get It
Need-Based Aid
(Grants, Pell, institutional)
Family income & assets (FAFSA) No File FAFSA + CSS Profile. Automatic at most schools.
Merit Scholarships GPA, test scores, achievements No Some are automatic; others require separate application.
Student Loans Enrollment status Yes + interest Federal Direct Loans via FAFSA. Avoid private loans if possible.

Key insight: Most top private universities (all Ivies, Stanford, MIT, etc.) practice need-blind admissions and meet 100% of demonstrated financial need. This means a family earning $75K/year might pay $0–$15K/year at Harvard — less than many state schools.

How Much Can Scholarships Save You?

The gap between sticker price and net cost is enormous. Here's how much students actually pay at our top-ranked schools:

SchoolSticker PriceAvg Net CostYou SaveDetails
Princeton University $59,710 $7,800 $51,910 Full breakdown →
Harvard University $59,076 $8,200 $50,876 Full breakdown →
Stanford University $61,731 $8,600 $53,131 Full breakdown →
UC San Diego $49,804 $8,800 $41,004 Full breakdown →
Duke University $63,054 $9,200 $53,854 Full breakdown →
UC Irvine $47,906 $9,400 $38,506 Full breakdown →
Yale University $62,250 $9,500 $52,750 Full breakdown →
UC Berkeley $48,176 $9,600 $38,576 Full breakdown →
Dartmouth College $62,430 $9,800 $52,630 Full breakdown →
UCLA $49,403 $9,811 $39,592 Full breakdown →
UC Santa Barbara $48,348 $10,200 $38,148 Full breakdown →
UC Davis $47,086 $10,400 $36,686 Full breakdown →
University of Pennsylvania $63,452 $10,800 $52,652 Full breakdown →
MIT $60,156 $11,200 $48,956 Full breakdown →
UC Santa Cruz $46,434 $11,200 $35,234 Full breakdown →
University of Virginia $55,914 $11,800 $44,114 Full breakdown →
Columbia University $65,524 $12,400 $53,124 Full breakdown →
University of North Carolina $38,020 $12,400 $25,620 Full breakdown →
University of Washington $41,997 $12,400 $29,597 Full breakdown →
University of Michigan $55,334 $12,600 $42,734 Full breakdown →
Caltech $63,402 $12,800 $50,602 Full breakdown →
University of Chicago $64,260 $12,800 $51,460 Full breakdown →
Brown University $65,146 $13,200 $51,946 Full breakdown →
University of Florida $28,658 $13,800 $14,858 Full breakdown →
Cornell University $63,200 $14,200 $49,000 Full breakdown →
University of Texas at Austin $41,070 $14,200 $26,870 Full breakdown →
Northwestern University $63,468 $14,600 $48,868 Full breakdown →
Georgia Tech $33,794 $14,800 $18,994 Full breakdown →
Georgetown University $62,052 $15,200 $46,852 Full breakdown →
Purdue University $28,794 $15,400 $13,394 Full breakdown →
University of Illinois $38,548 $15,600 $22,948 Full breakdown →
University of Connecticut $39,894 $15,800 $24,094 Full breakdown →
Johns Hopkins University $60,480 $16,200 $44,280 Full breakdown →
Tufts University $65,222 $16,400 $48,822 Full breakdown →
Texas A&M University $40,607 $16,800 $23,807 Full breakdown →
University of Minnesota $36,402 $16,800 $19,602 Full breakdown →
University of Pittsburgh $37,038 $16,800 $20,238 Full breakdown →
Rutgers University $35,654 $17,200 $18,454 Full breakdown →
Virginia Tech $35,484 $17,200 $18,284 Full breakdown →
Ohio State University $36,722 $17,600 $19,122 Full breakdown →
University of Nebraska $28,680 $18,200 $10,480 Full breakdown →
University of Rochester $60,550 $18,200 $42,350 Full breakdown →
Michigan State University $42,778 $18,400 $24,378 Full breakdown →
USC $63,468 $18,400 $45,068 Full breakdown →
Carnegie Mellon University $62,260 $18,600 $43,660 Full breakdown →
University of Kentucky $32,710 $18,800 $13,910 Full breakdown →
University of Colorado Boulder $40,488 $19,400 $21,088 Full breakdown →
University of Alabama $32,300 $21,400 $10,900 Full breakdown →
New York University (NYU) $58,168 $22,800 $35,368 Full breakdown →
Drexel University $58,965 $28,600 $30,365 Full breakdown →

How to Calculate Your Real College Cost

Follow these three steps to estimate what any school will actually cost you:

  1. Check the school's Net Price Calculator — Every school is required to have one. Enter your family income and assets to get a personalized estimate. Find it on the school's financial aid page.
  2. Compare net costs, not sticker prices — A $85K/yr private school with generous aid may cost less than a $30K/yr state school with minimal aid. Use our tuition pages to compare net costs by income bracket.
  3. Factor in the ROI — What will you earn after graduation? A school that costs $20K more per year but leads to $30K higher annual salary pays for itself within 3 years. See salary data by school.

Merit Scholarships: How to Get Money Without Financial Need

Merit scholarships are awarded for academic, athletic, or other achievements — regardless of family income. Here's what to know:

  • Most Ivies don't offer merit aid — Harvard, Yale, Princeton, etc. only give need-based aid. If your family earns $200K+, you'll pay close to full price.
  • Top public schools often have merit scholarships — Schools like University of Alabama, University of Kentucky, and Ohio State offer significant merit awards for high-GPA students.
  • Apply broadly — Schools where your stats are above the median are most likely to offer merit aid. Being a "big fish" at a slightly less selective school can save $100K+ over four years.

Compare Tuition & Financial Aid by School

Click any school to see sticker price, net cost by income bracket, and financial aid stats:

Brown University Caltech Carnegie Mellon University Columbia University Cornell University Dartmouth College Drexel University Duke University Georgetown University Georgia Tech Harvard University Johns Hopkins University MIT Michigan State University New York University (NYU) Northwestern University Ohio State University Princeton University Rutgers University Stanford University University of Texas at Austin University of Alabama Texas A&M University Tufts University UC Berkeley UC Davis UC Irvine UCLA UC San Diego UC Santa Barbara UC Santa Cruz University of Chicago University of Colorado Boulder University of Connecticut University of Florida University of Illinois Purdue University University of Kentucky University of Michigan University of Minnesota University of Nebraska University of North Carolina University of Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh University of Rochester USC University of Virginia University of Washington Virginia Tech Yale University

FAQ

How much does college actually cost after financial aid?

It varies enormously by school and family income. At need-blind private universities (Harvard, MIT, Stanford, all Ivies), families earning under $75K often pay $0-5K/year. At state schools, in-state students might pay $10-15K/year after aid. The only way to know your cost is to run a Net Price Calculator for each school.

Can I get a full-ride scholarship?

Full-ride scholarships exist but are rare and highly competitive. Your best path to a 'full ride' is attending a school that meets 100% of demonstrated financial need (most Ivies and top privates do this) and having a family income under $75K. For merit-based full rides, look at schools where your stats are well above the median.

Should I choose a cheaper school or a more prestigious one?

Compare net costs (after aid), not sticker prices. Then check graduate salary data for your specific major at each school. A prestigious school with strong ROI in your field may be worth a higher price. A prestigious school where graduates in your major earn the same as at a cheaper school is probably not worth the premium.