Here’s the full picture on paying for Pima Medical Institute-Aurora, covering the cost range, projected degree costs, net price, debt at graduation, default rates, and aid distribution patterns.
Jump to any section of this page using the links below:
Net price reflects the true cost to attend after grant and scholarship aid is deducted. 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) | $23,255.00 |
| Average net price (off-campus) | $21,668.00 |
Net price is far from uniform: lower-income families typically pay much less after aid. Below, average net price is broken out by family income:
| Family income | Average net price |
|---|---|
| Under $30,000 | $18,763.00 |
| $30,000 to $48,000 | $16,796.00 |
| $75,001 to $110,000 | $25,958.00 |
Estimate your specific net price using the school’s Pima Medical Institute-Aurora Net Price Calculator.
Want to know how that aid is awarded? See the grants & scholarships detail.
The median amount borrowed by graduates of Pima Medical Institute-Aurora amounts to $5,500.00, categorized as a Very Low (<$10k) burden category.
The percentile spread of debt at graduation is shown below:
| Percentile | Debt at graduation |
|---|---|
| 10th | $2,537.00 |
| 25th | $4,889.00 |
| Median (50th) | $5,500.00 |
| 75th | $9,499.00 |
| 90th | $10,525.00 |
How far apart the 10th and 90th percentiles sit tells you how uneven debt outcomes are.
For the full borrowing and repayment picture, see the student loan debt page.
Student debt at graduation is not evenly distributed across income levels. Below, debt is broken out by low, middle, and high family income:
| Family income | Median debt at graduation |
|---|---|
| Low income | $8,001.00 |
| Middle income | $5,500.00 |
| High income | $5,500.00 |
Borrowers from lower-income families leave school with $2,501.00 more than graduates from high-income families.
First-generation college students often carry different debt loads than their continuing-generation peers.
| Student group | Median debt at graduation |
|---|---|
| First-generation students | $5,500.00 |
| Continuing-generation students | $5,500.00 |
Pell Grants are the largest source of federal need-based aid for undergrads. Looking at Pell recipients versus non-recipients tells us how debt is distributed across need.
The gap between Pell-eligible and non-Pell median debt at Pima Medical Institute-Aurora is $2,675.00. This school is flagged by the Department of Education for Pell-related debt inequity.
The default-rate category at Pima Medical Institute-Aurora is Low (<5%).
For a sense of scale, Stafford disbursements at Pima Medical Institute-Aurora total $38,196,874.00 covering 4,983 student borrowers.
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 | 8 |
| Avg GI Bill amount | $8,936.00 |
For the full rundown of veteran and military benefits, see the veteran aid breakdown.
Use the figures above as a launch point, then think through Pima Medical Institute-Aurora, think through the questions below:
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.