Home / Affordable colleges / Hawaii / community colleges

Most affordable community colleges in Hawaii

6 community colleges in Hawaii report net price data, ranging from $5,854 at the lowest to higher costs at more selective schools. The median net price across these is $7,614. Hawaii's community colleges run a bit higher than the national average for the kind. The list below shows the most affordable options, ranked by net price.

Median net price in Hawaii

$7,614

National median for community colleges

$6,359

community colleges reporting in Hawaii

6

The most affordable community colleges in Hawaii, ranked by net price

1

Kapiolani Community College

HI

Net price

$5,854

Receive grant aid

64%

2

Kauai Community College

HI

Net price

$6,547

Receive grant aid

77%

3

Honolulu Community College

HI

Net price

$7,213

Receive grant aid

51%

4

Leeward Community College

HI

Net price

$8,015

Receive grant aid

73%

5

Hawaii Community College

HI

Net price

$8,200

Receive grant aid

78%

6

Windward Community College

HI

Net price

$8,601

Receive grant aid

57%

What makes a school affordable here

In Hawaii, the most affordable community colleges share two things in common. First, low published net prices reflect both reasonable sticker prices and meaningful institutional or state aid. Second, a high share of students receive grant aid. At Kapiolani Community College, the most affordable on this list, 64% of students receive grant aid. Net price reflects what a typical family actually pays, not the sticker price you see at first glance. A school with a $50,000 sticker price and a $10,000 net price is more affordable for most families than a school with a $20,000 sticker and a $19,000 net price.

Affordable colleges in Hawaii, other types

Affordable community colleges in other states

Find your personalized cost

National rankings use publicly available federal cost data. Plug in your actual aid offer and family situation for a Worth-It Score that reflects your specific picture.

Affordability rankings use publicly available federal higher-ed cost data. Net price reflects the average cost a family pays after grants and scholarships are subtracted from total cost of attendance, for the 2022-23 reporting year. See full methodology →