Tuition Actuals?

Anonymous
Is there anywhere that you can find normal tuition prices (probably indexed to family incomes) instead of the MSRP listed publicly?
Anonymous
Are you asking what the average family at various incomes pays? In other words, what kind of aid you can expect? Use the schools’ aid calculators.

What is with the wackadoodle pseudo-business speak of the questions today? First billable/nonbillable costs and now actuals and MSRPs? You’re trying to sound overeducated but you just sound dumb.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Are you asking what the average family at various incomes pays? In other words, what kind of aid you can expect? Use the schools’ aid calculators.

What is with the wackadoodle pseudo-business speak of the questions today? First billable/nonbillable costs and now actuals and MSRPs? You’re trying to sound overeducated but you just sound dumb.


MSRP is TV ads for cars.
Anonymous
OP, are you the one who also asked about billables?

Do you understand how inept you sound?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Are you asking what the average family at various incomes pays? In other words, what kind of aid you can expect? Use the schools’ aid calculators.

What is with the wackadoodle pseudo-business speak of the questions today? First billable/nonbillable costs and now actuals and MSRPs? You’re trying to sound overeducated but you just sound dumb.


MSRP is TV ads for cars.

That’s why I called it pseudo-business speak. Real, educated business people do not talk like this.
Anonymous
this is OP. I just wanted a snarky shorthand for "the single tuition price quoted in articles about schools when we know few people pay that price." Sorry to offend.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:this is OP. I just wanted a snarky shorthand for "the single tuition price quoted in articles about schools when we know few people pay that price." Sorry to offend.


you are still not making sense. FWIW I google"Cost of attendance x school" and look it up
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:this is OP. I just wanted a snarky shorthand for "the single tuition price quoted in articles about schools when we know few people pay that price." Sorry to offend.


As others mentioned, COA <school>. If you think you may qualify for need based aid, probably need to go through the trouble of completing NPC for each school. Not familiar with any other shortcuts.
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