3.2.22 | College and Costs, Tuition and Financial Aid
Time’s running out on how UNC will keep its financial promise to low-income students. by Eric Johnson ’08 In June 2017, then-Chancellor Carol L. Folt took the stage in Chapel Hill for a special announcement. The University had…
The strategy behind Carolina’s biggest fundraising campaign The University announced in January that it had surpassed the $4.25 billion goal for its campuswide fundraising drive almost a year before the campaign’s deadline. The Campaign for… read more
The UNC System Board of Governors voted last week to extend for a sixth consecutive year a freeze on in-state tuition. Resident tuition at UNC Chapel Hill will remain at $7,019 per year, the same that it has been since 2017. Out-of-state tuition,… read more
Undergraduate students from outside North Carolina will pay $684 more in tuition next year. In-state students will see no increase. read more
Tuition will go up 2 percent — $684 for out-of-state undergraduates — and $566 for nonresident graduate students in fall 2021 if the UNC System Board of Governors approves actions take Thursday by the UNC trustees. read more
The endowed fund will benefit dependents through the Carolina Covenant. read more
The fee will cover the cost of increasing enrollment by 50 percent. Entering out-of-state students will pay slightly more in tuition, and state residents will see no increase. read more
Small tuition increases for out-of-state students were approved by UNC’s trustees. read more
The University doesn’t track the beneficiaries of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals among its student body, but there are DACA students — and alumni — who qualify for the program President Donald Trump has ordered phased out. read more
The University has received the $1 million 2017 Cooke Prize for Equity in Educational Excellence read more