Here is what you can expect to pay at Miller-Motte College-Raleigh, including attendance costs, projected four- and two-year degree costs, average net price, debt outcomes, and how aid is distributed across income levels.
Jump to any section of this page using the links below:
Net price strips out grant and scholarship aid to show what families really pay. 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) | $22,736.00 |
| Average net price (off-campus) | $21,075.00 |
What families actually pay shifts with income, since need-based grants are larger for lower-income students. The breakdown below splits average net price across income brackets:
| Family income | Average net price |
|---|---|
| Under $30,000 | $21,339.00 |
| $30,000 to $48,000 | $17,162.00 |
Use Miller-Motte College-Raleigh Net Price Calculator, or visit the financial aid office.
Curious how grants and scholarships are distributed? Explore the grants & scholarships detail.
Median graduate debt at Miller-Motte College-Raleigh amounts to $10,661.00, which the Department of Education classifies as a Low ($10-20k) burden tier.
The percentile breakdown reveals the full debt landscape:
| Percentile | Debt at graduation |
|---|---|
| 10th | $3,530.00 |
| 25th | $6,333.00 |
| Median (50th) | $10,661.00 |
| 75th | $13,000.00 |
| 90th | $16,500.00 |
The distance from the 10th to the 90th percentile shows how widely debt outcomes vary.
For the full borrowing and repayment picture, see the student loan debt detail.
Median debt at graduation differs meaningfully across income brackets. The breakdown below segments borrowers by family income at entry:
| Family income | Median debt at graduation |
|---|---|
| Low income | $10,657.00 |
| Middle income | $11,457.00 |
| High income | $9,111.00 |
Graduates from lower-income families carry $1,546.00 in additional median debt versus high-income graduates.
First-generation college students often carry different debt loads than their continuing-generation peers.
| Student group | Median debt at graduation |
|---|---|
| First-generation students | $10,587.00 |
| Continuing-generation students | $12,139.00 |
Pell Grants are the largest source of federal need-based aid for undergrads. The Pell vs non-Pell debt gap reveals how borrowing differs by need.
The Pell-versus-non-Pell median debt difference at Miller-Motte College-Raleigh stands at $1,334.00. The Department of Education flags this school for a Pell-debt-inequity pattern.
The Department of Education default-rate tier for Miller-Motte College-Raleigh is Low (<5%).
| Window | Cohort default rate |
|---|---|
| 2-year | 11.7% |
For a sense of scale, Stafford disbursements at Miller-Motte College-Raleigh come to $1,878,020,953.00 across 126,669 recipients.
Veterans and current servicemembers may be eligible for major federal education benefits including the GI Bill and Tuition Assistance from the Department of Defense.
| GI Bill recipients | 1 |
| Avg GI Bill amount | $8,400.00 |
Dig into veteran education benefits on the veterans benefits detail.
Numbers only tell part of the story. As you weigh Miller-Motte College-Raleigh, a few questions are worth asking:
Explore the related pages below for a deeper look at the cost picture:
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.