Most students are not billed the full, advertised sticker price of a school. Instead, they will be given a financial aid offer that will include a combination of scholarships, grants, loans, and work-study. The price tag of going to Fred W Eberle Technical Center can appear tremendous, but do not forget that almost all students obtain some kind of financial help.
Just what financial assistance solutions will Fred W Eberle Technical Center deliver, and just what are you going to be eligible for? Read on for answers. Keep reading to discover how much school funding could be available to you.
The amount of financial aid and scholarships you are eligible for will vary depending on your family’s income. Read on to get a sense of the financial assistance available at Fred W Eberle Technical Center.
Through a mix of loans, grants, work-study and scholarships, schools bring down the effective cost so more students can attend. Bear in mind that not all aid is equal, and the amount any one student receives can vary widely.
Looking at the entering class at Fred W Eberle Technical Center, 100% of new full-time first-years were awarded at least some aid some 110 students).
| Type of Aid | % of Freshmen Receiving | Average Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Grant or scholarship aid (all sources) | 99% | $3,810 |
| Institutional grants & scholarships | 0% | — |
| Federal Pell grants | 99% | $3,213 |
| State/local grants | 29% | $2,000 |
| Federal student loans | 0% | — |
Grants and scholarships are the most valuable form of aid because, unlike loans, they never have to be repaid. Across the undergraduate body at Fred W Eberle Technical Center, some 85% of the undergraduate population received grant aid that averaged $3,820 (across roughly 110 undergraduates).
| Award | % of Undergrads Receiving | Average Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Grant or scholarship aid (all sources) | 85% | $3,820 |
| Federal Pell grants | 85% | $3,230 |
| Federal student loans | 0% | — |
Among title-IV aid recipients living on campus, grant and scholarship aid averaged $7,165.
Because need-based aid scales with family income, what students actually pay differs sharply across income brackets.
| Family Income | Average Net Price |
|---|---|
| $0 – $48,000 | $2,262 |
| $30,001 – $75,000 | $2,278 |
Remember these are net prices — what families pay after gift aid, not before.
Net price is the average annual cost after grants and scholarships are subtracted from the published cost of attendance — the figure closest to what a typical aid-receiving student actually pays.
| Cohort | Average Net Price |
|---|---|
| On-campus title-IV students | $2,129 |
| Off-campus title-IV students | $4,400 |
To project your own net price, use Fred W Eberle Technical Center’s online cost calculator: fetc.edu/?q=netpricecalc.
The figure below distills the debt data into a single burden category for Fred W Eberle Technical Center.
References
More about our data sources and methodologies.