This overview lays out the cost of attending Flagler College, from the published cost of attendance and projected degree cost through to net price, median student debt at graduation, default outcomes, and how aid varies by family income.
If you want to dig into a particular figure, jump to any section below:
The full cost of attending Flagler College stands at about $41,734.00 annually.
Here the cost is broken out three ways: no aid, average aid, and the aid a low-income student typically receives.
| Tuition and fees | $29,900.00 |
| + Room, board & other expenses | $11,834.00 |
| Total cost | $41,734.00 |
| That is 27% above the national average net price. |
| Total cost | $41,734.00 |
| − Grants and scholarships | −$15,219.00 |
| Net price | $26,515.00 |
| That is 19% below the national average net price. |
| Total cost | $41,734.00 |
| − Grants and scholarships | −$24,011.00 |
| Net price | $17,723.00 |
| That is 46% below the national average net price. | |
| Want the line-by-line detail? Dig into the tuition & fees page plus room and board. |
Published costs have climbed year over year at a recent average of 12.3% per year, so the four-year total runs well above today’s cost. The tables below project the cost forward across a full degree, side by side for a low-income student with aid, a typical student with average aid, and a student paying full sticker price with no aid. The loan rows amortise the projected total over a ten-year, 6.8% repayment.
| Projected 4-year net costs | Low Income w/ Aid | w/ Average Aid | No Aid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual growth rate | 12.3% | 12.3% | 12.3% |
| Freshman year | $19,894.00 | $29,763.00 | $46,847.00 |
| Senior year | $28,138.00 | $42,097.00 | $66,259.00 |
| Total 4-year net price | $95,431.00 | $142,772.00 | $224,720.00 |
| 10-year loan interest @ 6.8% | $36,356.00 | $54,391.00 | $85,610.00 |
| Total monthly payment | $1,098.00 | $1,643.00 | $2,586.00 |
| Total amount paid | $131,787.00 | $197,163.00 | $310,330.00 |
| Projected 2-year net costs | Low Income w/ Aid | w/ Average Aid | No Aid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual growth rate | 12.3% | 12.3% | 12.3% |
| Freshman year | $19,894.00 | $29,763.00 | $46,847.00 |
| Senior year | $22,331.00 | $33,410.00 | $52,586.00 |
| Total 2-year net price | $42,226.00 | $63,173.00 | $99,433.00 |
| 10-year loan interest @ 6.8% | $16,086.00 | $24,067.00 | $37,880.00 |
| Total monthly payment | $486.00 | $727.00 | $1,144.00 |
| Total amount paid | $58,312.00 | $87,239.00 | $137,313.00 |
See the full net-price breakdown in the net price section below.
The net price is the real out-of-pocket cost — what families pay after grant and scholarship aid is applied. For most students, this is the more useful number than published tuition because it reflects the real out-of-pocket cost.
| Average net price (on-campus) | $30,525.00 |
| Average net price (off-campus) | $29,951.00 |
Net price varies sharply by family income, dropping as need-based aid grows. The figures below give average net price by income bracket:
| Family income | Average net price |
|---|---|
| Under $30,000 | $22,668.00 |
| $30,000 to $48,000 | $24,521.00 |
| $48,001 to $75,000 | $25,428.00 |
| $75,001 to $110,000 | $31,814.00 |
| Over $110,000 | $35,920.00 |
For a personalized estimate, try the Flagler College Net Price Calculator, or visit the financial aid office.
Curious how grants and scholarships are distributed? Explore the financial aid page.
Median graduate debt at Flagler College comes to $15,000.00, placing the school in the Low ($10-20k) debt-burden bucket.
Here’s how debt at graduation distributes across borrowers:
| Percentile | Debt at graduation |
|---|---|
| 10th | $3,530.00 |
| 25th | $6,500.00 |
| Median (50th) | $15,000.00 |
| 75th | $26,725.00 |
| 90th | $32,000.00 |
The 10th-to-90th-percentile spread is one signal of how variable debt outcomes are across the student body.
Dig deeper into debt 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 | $16,681.00 |
| Middle income | $14,500.00 |
| High income | $15,000.00 |
Low-income borrowers graduate with $1,681.00 more debt than high-income graduates.
Debt at graduation often differs for first-generation students.
| Student group | Median debt at graduation |
|---|---|
| First-generation students | $15,375.00 |
| Continuing-generation students | $14,000.00 |
First-generation borrowers from Flagler College graduate with $1,375.00 in extra median debt compared with continuing-generation peers.
Pell Grants are the federal government’s primary need-based undergraduate aid program. Contrasting Pell and non-Pell borrowers shows how need shapes debt.
The Pell vs non-Pell debt gap at Flagler College works out to $2,775.00. This institution is flagged by federal data for Pell-debt inequity.
The federal default-rate tier for Flagler College is Low (<5%).
| Window | Cohort default rate |
|---|---|
| 2-year | 5.0% |
For scale, federal Stafford loan disbursements at Flagler College come to $189,650,607.00 across 11,246 recipients.
Veterans and active-duty servicemembers can tap dedicated federal aid programs such as the Post-9/11 GI Bill and DoD Tuition Assistance.
| GI Bill recipients | 69 |
| Avg GI Bill amount | $20,952.00 |
For the full rundown of veteran and military benefits, see the college veterans page.
The data above is a foundation; round it out by asking yourself about Flagler College, the questions below are worth your time:
Use the pages below to go deeper on a specific part of the cost story:
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.