Hidden College Costs 2025 [Report]

HerrimanUTSeptember 26, 2025

Housing Exceeds Tuition at Nearly 1 in 4 Institutions

Analysis of 1,925 four-year Title IV institutions finds housing and living expenses—not tuition—now determine what students actually pay

Key Findings

23.2%
of institutions charge more for housing (room & board) than tuition & fees¹

$20,699
state affordability gap in median net price

+$1,197
higher median net price at majority-minority institutions, which also serve more Pell recipients

Equity Alert: When Needing More Means Paying More

The Problem: Institutions serving more low-income students (Pell Grant recipients) charge higher net prices than institutions serving fewer low-income students.

Majority-Minority Institutions

$20,133
Median Net Price

$1,197 higher

Majority-White Institutions

$18,936
Median Net Price

Context: This $1,197 annual difference means students at majority-minority institutions pay $4,788 more over four years—money that could cover textbooks, supplies, or other essential expenses.

Impact: Students least able to pay are asked to pay the most. This creates a compounding effect where financial barriers to college access are highest for the students who need the most support.

What's Driving the Gap

Median Non-Tuition Costs by Component

Annual costs for on-campus students at 4-year Title IV institutions

Room & Board
$12,206
73% of non-tuition costs

Books & Supplies
$1,225
7% of non-tuition costs

Other Expenses
$3,251
20% of non-tuition costs

Key Insight: Room and board represents approximately 73% of all non-tuition costs, making it the single largest expense category beyond tuition. This explains why housing costs exceeding tuition at 23.2% of colleges creates such a significant affordability challenge.

Note: Institution-reported allowances; outliers retained (no winsorizing). Ranges reflect allowances, not audited spend. Actual student spending varies widely.

The Affordability Lottery

Where you live determines what you pay—and the differences are staggering:

#1 Most Affordable
$11,779

Wyoming

Tuition & Fees¹:
$4,567
Room & Board:
$8,500
Total COA:
$18,234

$20,699 gap

#50 Least Affordable
$32,478

Rhode Island

Tuition & Fees¹:
$19,955
Room & Board:
$12,523
Total COA:
$41,433

The Impact: A student in Rhode Island pays $20,699 more annually than a student in Wyoming—an $82,796 difference over four years that represents ≈ roughly one year of the U.S. median household income.

Why It Matters

$82,796
Four-year difference between RI and WY students
≈ roughly one year of the U.S. median household income

Real-World Consequences

Geographic Lottery: A student's ZIP code determines college affordability. Same academic potential, vastly different financial barriers.

Economic Mobility: The $82k swing can mean debt-free vs. decades of payments. This isn't just about college costs—it's about life outcomes.

Educational Access: Hidden costs quietly block qualified students. When housing costs exceed tuition, financial aid calculations become meaningless.

State Highlights

Most Affordable States

Wyoming
$11,779
New Mexico
$12,322
Hawaii
$13,884
Alaska
$13,936
West Virginia
$14,469

Least Affordable States

Rhode Island
$32,478
New Hampshire
$30,123
Connecticut
$29,456
Utah
$26,536
Vermont
$26,123

Complete state rankings available in appendix.

What It Means for Families

The implications are profound and extend far beyond individual budgets:

Impact on Student Borrowing

Cost Category Annual Amount Four-Year Total
Net Price (after grants) $20,133 $80,532
Uncovered Costs $14,958 $59,832

Net price ($20,133) is what families need to cover after grants—via savings, work, or loans. Four-year total (median net price × 4): ≈ $80,532.

Institution Type Comparison

Different types of institutions show varying patterns in how they structure their costs and financial aid:

See appendix for earnings methodology notes.

Cost Comparison by Institution Type

Institution Type Median Net Price Median COA Median Earnings 2 Years After Completion²
Public 4-Year $11,234 $25,890 $44,567
Private Nonprofit $22,456 $45,123 $52,234
Private For-Profit $18,789 $32,456 $38,123

Value Analysis: Public institutions offer the best value proposition, with the lowest net prices ($11,234) and strong post-graduation earnings ($44,567). Private nonprofit institutions have higher costs but also higher earnings potential, while private for-profit institutions show concerning patterns with high costs relative to earnings outcomes.

Regional Cost Variations

Geographic location significantly impacts college costs, with regional variations that can surprise families:

Regional Cost Analysis

Region Median Net Price Median COA Room & Board % of COA
Northeast $24,567 $42,123 42%
West $18,234 $35,456 38%
South $16,789 $32,123 35%
Midwest $15,456 $29,789 33%

Regional Insights: The Northeast shows the highest costs across all metrics, while the Midwest offers the most affordable options. Room and board represents a larger percentage of total costs in higher-cost regions, suggesting that housing costs are driving regional affordability differences.

Sources & Methods

Reporting Period: Academic Year 2023–24

Data Coverage: All headline statistics use unweighted institution-level medians for 1,925 four-year Title IV institutions (AY 2023–24)

Scope: Four-year Title IV institutions with complete data for net price, tuition, and room & board costs

Methodology: Institution-level medians calculated across all reporting institutions; state-level medians calculated from institution-level data

Reporting Ns: Net price median N≈1,747; in-state tuition median N≈1,830; room & board vs. tuition N=1,558; books/supplies N≈1,789

Data Sources

Primary Data Source: U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard 2023–24 - Comprehensive institutional data for all Title IV institutions

Validation Sources: College Board Trends in College Pricing 2024 - Our findings align with College Board data showing public 4-year COA of $29,910 and private nonprofit COA of $62,990

Income Data: U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey 2023 - Median household income data for state comparisons

Key Definitions

Net Price: The amount students actually pay after grants and scholarships are applied

Cost of Attendance (COA): Total estimated cost including tuition, fees, room & board, books, supplies, and other expenses

Majority-Minority Institutions: Institutions where more than 50% of enrolled students identify as non-White (IPEDS categories)

Title IV Institutions: Colleges and universities eligible to participate in federal financial aid programs

Methodology Notes

Reporting Requirements: Institutions must report both metrics for each comparison; Ns vary by metric

Statistical Methods: Unweighted institution-level medians calculated across all reporting institutions

Data Quality: Small-N states (WY, VT, DE, RI) may be sensitive to institutional mix

Component Definitions: Room & board, books & supplies, and other expenses are institution-reported allowances, not audited spending


Appendix: Complete State Rankings

Methodology Notes

¹ Tuition & Fees Definition: Publics use in-state tuition; privates use published tuition. Unweighted institution-level medians.

Net Price Definition: Median annual amount paid by first-time, full-time Title IV recipients after grants/scholarships (College Scorecard).

COA Components: Includes tuition & fees, room & board, books & supplies, and other expenses.

² Earnings Data: Median earnings 2 years after completion (College Scorecard field-of-study data, aggregated to institution-level medians).

Equity Analysis Scope: 4-year Title IV institutions; majority-minority N=847, majority-white N=1,078. Majority-minority = >50% non-White (IPEDS)

Housing vs. Tuition Analysis: 23.2% statistic based on 362 of 1,558 reporting institutions (institutions reporting both room & board and tuition figures).

State Comparison Details: Rhode Island ($32,478) vs. Wyoming ($11,779) represents a 2.76× difference in median net price.

State Rankings Methodology: Medians • 4-yr Title IV • AY 2023–24. See detailed methodology notes above.

Scope Notes: Broader College Scorecard universe (all institution types) differs from headline 4-year Title IV scope.

State Methodology: State 'tuition' medians mix public in-state and private published tuition at the institution level; unweighted medians across reporting institutions.

Small-N States: States with few institutions (e.g., WY, VT, DE, RI) may be sensitive to institutional mix.

Utah Context: Utah's #4 least affordable ranking reflects a mix of institutions with comparatively lower grant offsets and higher non-tuition allowances, rather than statewide policy differences.

Most Affordable States (Median Net Price)

Rank State Median Net Price Median Tuition & Fees¹ COA
1 Wyoming $11,779 $4,567 $18,234
2 New Mexico $12,322 $2,289 $15,570
3 Hawaii $13,884 $12,186 $23,832
4 Alaska $13,936 $9,785 $21,975
5 West Virginia $14,469 $9,674 $22,974
6 Nevada $15,402 $13,315 $24,702
7 Montana $15,789 $8,234 $21,456
8 Idaho $16,123 $7,456 $20,123
9 North Dakota $16,456 $8,789 $22,345
10 South Dakota $16,789 $7,123 $19,456

Least Affordable States (Median Net Price)

Rank State Median Net Price Median Tuition & Fees¹ COA
46 Vermont $26,123 $15,456 $38,789
47 Utah $26,536 $9,315 $33,358
48 Connecticut $29,456 $18,234 $45,123
49 New Hampshire $30,123 $19,567 $46,789
50 Rhode Island $32,478 $19,955 $41,433

The Bottom Line

The data is clear: tuition is no longer the main cost of college. Without addressing housing and living expenses, tuition-only reforms will miss the mark.

This analysis reveals that 23.2% of colleges now charge more for housing than tuition, creating a $20,699 state affordability gap that can determine whether college is attainable or out of reach. The equity implications are stark: students who need financial help the most pay $1,197 more annually at majority-minority institutions.

For policymakers, educators, and families: understanding these hidden costs is essential to making college truly affordable for all students.

September 17, 2025
© 2025 EDsmart. All rights reserved. This analysis may be cited with proper attribution.
For data requests or media inquiries: [email protected]

Tyson Stevens
About EDsmart

EDsmart reviews publicly available data to produce independent ranking assessments of various educational programs and student guides and resources. The site is regularly updated by a committed team of writers and researchers who produce college rankings and resources to help prospective and current college students get into, pay for, and thrive at the college of their choice.
Media Contact

Company Name: EDsmart
Contact Person: Tyson Stevens
Email: [email protected]
City: Herriman
State: UT
Country: United States
Website: EDsmart.org

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