This overview lays out the cost of attending Concorde Career Institute-Tampa, including attendance costs, projected four- and two-year degree costs, average net price, debt outcomes, and how aid is distributed across income levels.
Use the section links below to navigate this overview:
Net price strips out grant and scholarship aid to show what families really pay. For most prospective students, net price gives a more realistic estimate than sticker tuition.
| Average net price (on-campus) | $26,077.00 |
| Average net price (off-campus) | $24,449.00 |
The real cost varies by income because need-based aid scales with financial need. The breakdown below splits average net price across income brackets:
| Family income | Average net price |
|---|---|
| Under $30,000 | $24,330.00 |
| $30,000 to $48,000 | $23,756.00 |
| $48,001 to $75,000 | $26,786.00 |
| $75,001 to $110,000 | $26,572.00 |
| Over $110,000 | $28,791.00 |
For a personalized estimate, try the Concorde Career Institute-Tampa Net Price Calculator, or contact the financial aid office.
For the grant-and-scholarship detail behind these figures, see the grants & scholarships detail.
The median amount borrowed by graduates of Concorde Career Institute-Tampa works out to $9,500.00, landing it in the Very Low (<$10k) debt-burden bucket.
The full distribution of debt at graduation looks like this:
| Percentile | Debt at graduation |
|---|---|
| 10th | $3,268.00 |
| 25th | $5,500.00 |
| Median (50th) | $9,500.00 |
| 75th | $9,500.00 |
| 90th | $19,622.00 |
The 10th-to-90th-percentile spread is one signal of how variable debt outcomes are across the student body.
Read the complete debt breakdown on the student-loan-debt breakdown.
Student debt at graduation is not evenly distributed across income levels. The figures below split graduating borrowers into three income brackets:
| Family income | Median debt at graduation |
|---|---|
| Low income | $9,500.00 |
| Middle income | $9,500.00 |
| High income | $5,917.00 |
Graduates from lower-income families carry $3,583.00 more debt than their high-income peers.
First-generation college students often carry different debt loads than their continuing-generation peers.
| Student group | Median debt at graduation |
|---|---|
| First-generation students | $9,500.00 |
| Continuing-generation students | $9,500.00 |
Pell Grants are the largest source of federal need-based aid for undergrads. Contrasting Pell and non-Pell borrowers shows how need shapes debt.
The median debt gap between Pell and non-Pell graduates of Concorde Career Institute-Tampa stands at $1,979.00. The Department of Education flags this school for a Pell-debt-inequity pattern.
The default-rate category at Concorde Career Institute-Tampa is Low (<5%).
| Window | Cohort default rate |
|---|---|
| 2-year | 9.5% |
For scale, federal Stafford loan disbursements at Concorde Career Institute-Tampa amount to $65,181,182.00 over 7,516 disbursements.
Veterans and active-duty service members may qualify for substantial federal education benefits including the GI Bill and Tuition Assistance from the Department of Defense.
| GI Bill recipients | 44 |
| Avg GI Bill amount | $16,714.00 |
For the full rundown of veteran and military benefits, see the college veterans page.
Beyond the data above, it helps to ask a few questions when weighing Concorde Career Institute-Tampa, keep these questions in mind:
Each page below covers one part of paying for college in more detail:
Data sources. Figures on this page draw from the U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard, the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System (IPEDS), and MediaFactual editorial review. Net-price calculator and financial-aid office links are taken from the institution’s own published data.