Most Affordable Health Colleges
The most affordable Health colleges, ranked by net cost while maintaining strong outcomes. This list focuses on affordability without compromising long-term value.
By the Numbers
This list highlights where students can reduce cost without sacrificing long-term career outcomes.
Of the 1,284 four-year colleges that offer Health nationally, these 25 rank highest. Each is scored on the UCD Score, our 0 to 100 measure of outcomes, value, affordability, and selectivity.
What the Data Shows
- UCD Scores run from 93 down to 66, so quality eases off toward the bottom of the list.
- Median earnings run from $25,021 to $75,971 ten years out, so the cheapest options still span a range of outcomes.
- Across the shortlist net prices reach no higher than $5,718 a year, so the whole list stays budget-bounded.
Affordable Health Colleges: What Stands Out
Across 1,284 four-year Health colleges, net prices vary widely, the lowest being Texas A&M University-Central Texas at $1,300 a year against a $20,277 average. Public institutions account for 23 of the top 25, reflecting the role of state funding in lowering cost.
How This Ranking Works
Every college here is ranked by its UCD Score, a 0 to 100 figure that blends graduate earnings, value for the net price paid, affordability, and (for four-year colleges) selectivity. Colleges are scored within peer groups, so a low-cost public and a selective private can be compared fairly rather than the most expensive school simply winning.
We only include colleges that actually offer Health and predominantly award four-year degrees, drawn from federal IPEDS completions and College Scorecard outcomes. The data refreshes with each annual update, so this ranking never goes stale. See how the UCD Score is built →
How to Use This Ranking
Use this to find low-cost Health colleges that still deliver. Confirm your own net price with each college's calculator, since the figures here are averages, then weigh the cheapest options against their earnings and the UCD Score so you trade down on price, not on outcomes.
Questions you might still have
What is the most affordable college for Health?
Texas A&M University-Central Texas has the lowest net price here at $1,300 a year, against a field average of $20,277. Net price is the cost after grant and scholarship aid.
Is a low-cost Health college worth it?
Usually, when outcomes hold up. On this list, a low net price need not mean weaker results. Weigh net price against earnings and the UCD Score together.
What is the difference between public and private for Health?
Public colleges usually post lower net prices thanks to state funding, while private colleges can match them with generous aid. Both appear here; the UCD Score lets you compare them on outcomes, not just sticker price.
Are there hidden costs beyond net price?
Net price covers tuition, fees, and living costs after aid, but it is an average. Your figure depends on family income, and books, travel, and program fees add up. Run each college's net price calculator for your situation.
How much does it cost to study Health?
Four-year Health colleges average $20,277 a year in net price after aid, and the lowest on this ranking is $1,300. Net price varies with family income, so check each college's calculator for your situation.
How many four-year colleges offer Health?
1,284 four-year colleges offer Health nationally. This page ranks the top 25; browse the rest in the college directory.
Do Health graduates earn well?
Graduates of four-year Health colleges earn a median of $59,978 ten years after entry, with the highest on this list at $75,971 (CUNY Bernard M Baruch College).
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