More colleges are resetting tuition. Does the strategy work?

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When Utica University unveiled plans to reset its published tuition price in 2015, the private New York nonprofit was offering a discount rate of over 62% to prospective students, said Laura Casamento, who retired this year as the university’s president.  

There was a growing perception that Utica’s published sticker price of roughly $35,500 was out of reach for its target student population, Casamento said. The university also faced stagnant retention rates

So the university did what just a few dozen other colleges and universities had done over the decade prior, according to one higher ed consultant. It lowered its published tuition price 42% to under $20,000 to better match the actual amount students pay after factoring in institutional scholarships. 

But as more colleges take the tuition reset plunge, questions around the effectiveness of strategy remain. Some colleges have seen immediate and long-term benefits from the practice, with surging enrollments and applications. However, for many colleges, that growth tapered off over the next few years. And the resets were not enough to turn around the financial fortunes of every college. 

“For some schools, they did it and maybe they were too far gone,” said Lucie Lapovsky, an economist and higher education consultant who’s worked with colleges on tuition resets. “Most of our private colleges in this country are challenged right now. It’s not easy.”

Enrollment grew the first few years after Utica’s reset, from 4,463 students in fall 2015 to 5,258 students in fall 2017. The university’s retention rate for full-time students also increased by six percentage points over that period, growing to 76%, according to federal data. And graduation rates have steadily ticked up since the reset and now hover around 58%. 

However, after the brief boost, Utica’s enrollment has since plummeted to 3,861 students in fall 2022 — lower than what it was before the reset. Casamento said those numbers have rebounded this fall, with first-year enrollment up 31%, transfers up 61%, and international student population nearly tripling compared to last year, “an indication that the university’s impact and reputation in the market is growing,” she said. 

Momentum for tuition resets among private colleges has grown since 2015. 

In September, two Iowa private institutions, Graceland University and Wartburg College, announced tuition resets of roughly 39% and 45%, respectively. Other institutions — Lasell University, in Massachusetts, Lenoir-Rhyne University, in North Carolina, and Colby-Sawyer College, in New Hampshire — have also recently slashed tuition. 

Why do colleges pursue resets? 

For decades, colleges have offered merit aid and scholarships in their race to get more students — developing a high-price, high-aid methodology, Lapovsky said. 

That has pushed the average discount rate for first-time, full-time students to about 56% at private colleges, she said. But students don’t know the actual cost of attendance until after they’ve applied, filled out financial aid forms and received their acceptance letter, Lapovsky said. 

The net price — the published tuition minus financial aid a student receives — of private colleges can be close to what students would pay at public institutions. But many prospective applicants are often under the false impression that only low-income students get aid, Lapovsky said. 

“It’s gotten to the point where there is so little correlation between the gross price and the net price that it’s dissuading lot’s of people from looking at a college because they don’t know what they’re going to pay,” said Lapovsky. “A lot of private schools are being excluded from the choice that students have.”

For some private schools, the reasoning behind the high-tuition, high-aid method is falling out of favor. Many prospective students have moved away from relating the price of an institution to its quality, and — contrary to popular belief — most students value the net price of colleges over the scholarships they receive, said Lapovsky

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