Location: Princeton, N.J.Undergraduate Enrollment: 5,220Total Annual Cost: $50,269Average Debt at Graduation: $5,225Students Who Borrow: 23%Princeton’s no-loan financial aid policy, introduced a decade ago, means that less than one-fourth of students need to borrow, and the amount they do borrow is small. Princeton’s average debt at graduation, at a little over $5,000, is the lowest among our top 200 private colleges.
1. Princeton University
Location: Berea, Ky.Undergraduate Enrollment: 1,613Total Annual Cost: $32,894Average Debt at Graduation: $5,836Students Who Borrow: 73%Plenty of colleges talk about keeping costs, and student debt, down, but Berea walks the walk: This Christian-focused institution covers the full $25,500 tuition for all students, out of a mix of grants and scholarships, leaving them to cover only $7,394 in remaining costs (including room and board). It’s no surprise that average debt here is second-lowest on our list.
2. Berea College
Location: Williamstown, Mass.Undergraduate Enrollment: 2,029Total Annual Cost: $55,360Average Debt at Graduation: $8,369Students Who Borrow: 43%With an average financial-aid package of about $40,000 a year, Williams brings the annual cost of its elite education to a relatively modest $15,360 for students who qualify. Williams admits students without considering their financial circumstances and meets the full demonstrated need of students who enroll.
3. Williams College
Location: New Haven, Conn.Undergraduate Enrollment: 5,294Total Annual Cost: $53,700Average Debt at Graduation: $9,254Students Who Borrow: 28%An Ivy League school with a walloping endowment and a financial-aid budget of $117 million, Yale offers no-loan financial aid to more than half its students, including families earning well over $100,000. Result: Students who borrow carry away one-third less debt than the national average for borrowers at private schools.
4. Yale University
Location: Claremont, Cal.Undergraduate Enrollment: 956Total Annual Cost: $55,700Average Debt at Graduation: $9,435Students Who Borrow: 36%This tiny, all-women’s school awards generous need-based and merit-based grants as well as privately funded need-based loans, which do not accrue interest while the student is in school. (Students also have access to federally sponsored loans, such as Staffords.) Scripps is one of the three members of the Claremont Colleges (a consortium of five colleges and two graduate programs that share faculty and facilities) to make our top ten for low debt.
5. Scripps College
Click here to see the full list from Kiplinger
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See the full listStudents took on more of the burden by digging deeper into their own funds. They spent an average $2,555 on college from their savings and income in the last academic year, up from $1,944 the previous year. But their spending wasn’t enough to make up for cutbacks by their parents.All told, parents funded 37% of college costs through spending or borrowing, down from 47% two years ago. Students accounted for 30%; grants and scholarships footed 29%; and relatives and friends paid for 4%, according to the survey.Just over half of the students in the survey lived at home while they attended college this year, up almost 9% from a year ago. Most of that increase was accounted for by families with income of more than $100,000.Related ArticlesTax Breaks Every College Student (and Parent) Should Know AboutAre Some College Trustees Abusing Their Trust for Profit?This Granny’s On The Run After Allegedly Gambling Away Her Grandson’s $97,000 College FundA shift toward two-year colleges also was evident for a second straight year, Salllie Mae said. Respondents included 29% who attended two-year public schools, up from 21% the previous year.”American families are frustrated by the cost but they’re being creative and employing different solutions to make sure their students can go to college,” said Ipsos pollster and managing director Clifford Young.The survey also found a decline in credit card use among college undergrads since the Credit Card Act took effect 2½ years ago. That legislation barred those under age 21 from having credit cards without a qualified co-signer or proof of sufficient income to repay the debt.Although few used them to pay for college costs, 35% of students owned a credit card this academic year. That was down from 42% in 2010, the first year the survey asked about credit cards. The median outstanding balance was $196.Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.