College Factual  by our College Data Analytics Team
       Unbiased Factual Guarantee

American Beauty School Student Loan Debt

$3,169 Typical Student Debt
$37.11/mo Est. Monthly Payment
Very Low (<$10k) Debt Burden Category

Here you will find what students actually borrow to attend American Beauty School— how much they borrow, how that debt is spread across the student body, and what it costs to pay back. These figures are reported by the Department of Education and IPEDS.

Freshman-Year Loans for American Beauty School

For incoming students at American Beauty School, 88% of freshmen borrow to help pay for their first year, with a typical loan of $6,662 apiece. This figure includes both private and federally funded student loans.

Federal loans alone average $7,478. This meets or exceeds the $5,500 cap on first-year federal borrowing for the typical dependent freshman. Note that average undergraduate loan amounts shown later do not include private loans — so the full freshman figure above is not directly comparable.

Undergraduate Loan Averages for American Beauty School

Among all degree-seeking undergrads at American Beauty School, 39% finance part of their studies with federal loans, borrowing on average $6,761 per year. That is 9.6% lower than the $7,478 typical freshmen borrow.

Borrowing the same amount each year would add up to roughly $13,522 in two years and roughly $27,044 over a four-year span. These projections assume the same federal borrowing each year and exclude private and Parent PLUS loans.

Undergraduate federal borrowingValue
Share using federal loans39%
Average federal loan per year$6,761
Undergraduates with a federal loan86
Total federal loans (one year)$581,467

How Much Students Borrow at American Beauty School

The median student at American Beauty School borrows $3,169 of cumulative federal debt.

Borrower groupMedian federal debt
All federal borrowers$3,169
Students who completed (graduates)$3,500
Students who withdrew$2,210

The figure for students who withdrew is worth watching: debt without a completed credential is the hardest to repay.

Debt Spread by Percentile

Looking only at the median is misleading — these four percentiles describe the full debt distribution for borrowers at American Beauty School.

PercentileCumulative Federal Debt
10th percentile (lowest-debt students)$1,721
25th percentile$2,538
75th percentile$5,182
90th percentile (highest-debt students)$6,698

How wide this percentile range is tells you how much borrowing varies across students at American Beauty School.

Repayment Burden at American Beauty School

Repayment burden translates the debt figures into what a borrower actually pays each month. American Beauty School.

How Often Borrowers Default at American Beauty School

The default rate measures how many borrowers fall behind and ultimately fail to repay their federal loans. Two-year cohort default-rate data for American Beauty School is shown below.

MetricValue
2-year cohort default rate10.4%
Borrowers in the cohort172

This rate follows a borrower cohort from the start of repayment through the two-year window the Department of Education uses.

Median Debt by Student Group at American Beauty School

The breakdowns below show median federal debt by income, first-generation status, and dependency.

Median Debt by Income Bracket

Income tierMedian federal debt
Low income$3,069

By Dependency Status

CohortMedian federal debt
Dependent students$3,169
Independent students$3,090

What to Know Before You Borrow

Subsidized and Unsubsidized Loans

Subsidized loans pause interest while you are in school; unsubsidized loans do not. That difference compounds over four years, so the type of loan you take matters as much as the amount.

Worth Knowing

Federal student loans are not discharged in bankruptcy in all but the rarest cases, and the government can withhold part of your income or tax refund if you default.

References

More about our data sources and methodologies.

Popular Reports

College Rankings
Best by Location
Degree Guides by Major
Graduate Programs

Compare Your School Options