2026 Best Colleges for Women’s Cross Country (Division III) in Southwest
Choosing a college as a student athlete means weighing both the classroom and the competition. This list ranks 6 schools for Women’s Cross Country (Division III) by academic-athletic quality, using our 2026 methodology.
To arm you with the information you need, College Factual scores each program on a blend of academic-athletic outcomes (NCAA Academic Progress Rate and Graduation Success Rate), athletic financial resources (team revenue, expenses, and aid per athlete from the EADA survey), and overall school quality, drawing on NCAA, U.S. Department of Education EADA, and IPEDS data.
Learn more about our ranking methodology.
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Top 5 Colleges for Women’s Cross Country (Division III)
Explore the leading programs below:
No school ranked higher than University of Dallas this year for Women's Cross Country (Division III). University of Dallas is a private not-for-profit school based in Irving, TX. Team revenue averages $3,224 per participant, with expenses of about $3,224 per participant. The school awards about $0 in athletic aid per athlete.
LeTourneau University is one of the top schools for Women's Cross Country (Division III), at #2. LeTourneau University is a private not-for-profit school based in Longview, TX. Per-participant team revenue is roughly $4,394, with expenses of about $4,394 per participant. Athletic aid averages $0 per athlete.
Texas Lutheran University earned the #3 place for student athletes. This private not-for-profit school is set in Seguin, TX. Per-participant team revenue is roughly $7,725, compared with $5,989 spent per athlete. Per-athlete athletic aid is roughly $0.
Hardin-Simmons University earned the #4 place for student athletes. Located in Abilene, TX, Hardin-Simmons University is a private not-for-profit institution. The program generates about $6,860 in revenue per athlete, compared with $6,684 spent per athlete. Athletic aid averages $0 per athlete.
University of Mary Hardin-Baylor landed the #5 spot for Women's Cross Country (Division III). Located in Belton, TX, University of Mary Hardin-Baylor is a private not-for-profit institution. The program generates about $2,557 in revenue per athlete, with expenses of about $2,557 per participant. Per-athlete athletic aid is roughly $0.
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Notes and References
*These averages are for the top 25 ranked colleges only.
The ranking above is published by College Factual, 2026 edition. Rankings consider a blend of academic-athletic outcomes (NCAA Academic Progress Rate and Graduation Success Rate), athletic financial resources (team revenue, expenses, and athletic aid from the federal EADA survey), and overall school quality. The current methodology measures academic-athletic quality and does not include team win/loss performance.
References
See our data sources and methodologies.