Here you will find what students actually borrow to attend Pure Aesthetics— 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.
Among first-year students at Pure Aesthetics, 90% of incoming students take out a loan to help cover first-year costs, averaging $5,889 each — a figure that counts both private and federal student loans.
Federal loans alone average $5,889. That is at or past the $5,500 federal first-year limit for the typical dependent freshman. Remember the all-undergraduate figures below leave out private loans, so they will look lower than this private-plus-federal freshman amount.
Across the full undergraduate body at Pure Aesthetics (freshmen included), 42% finance part of their studies with federal loans, for a typical $5,735 each per year. This is 2.6% under the $5,889 typical freshmen borrow.
Borrowing at that rate every year works out to about $11,470 after two years and $22,940 across a four-year program. The estimate holds federal borrowing constant and does not count private or Parent PLUS loans.
| Undergraduate federal borrowing | Value |
|---|---|
| Share using federal loans | 42% |
| Average federal loan per year | $5,735 |
| Undergraduates with a federal loan | 38 |
| Total federal loans (one year) | $217,928 |
The median student at Pure Aesthetics borrows $6,333 of cumulative federal debt.
| Borrower group | Median federal debt |
|---|---|
| All federal borrowers | $6,333 |
Looking only at the median is misleading — these four percentiles describe the full debt distribution for borrowers at Pure Aesthetics.
| Percentile | Cumulative Federal Debt |
|---|---|
| 25th percentile | $3,666 |
| 75th percentile | $6,333 |
Repayment burden translates the debt figures into what a borrower actually pays each month. Pure Aesthetics.
Borrowing varies by family income, by first-generation status, and by dependency status.
Median Debt by Income Bracket
| Income tier | Median federal debt |
|---|---|
| Low income | $6,333 |
Dependency-Status Comparison
| Cohort | Median federal debt |
|---|---|
| Dependent students | $3,666 |
| Independent students | $6,333 |
The Difference Between 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.
Important to Remember
Unlike most other debt, federal student loans generally survive bankruptcy — and unpaid balances can lead to wage garnishment — so borrow only what you truly need.
References
More about our data sources and methodologies.