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Is Anderson University worth it?

A first pass affordability and outcome read for Anderson, using national average inputs. Run your own numbers for a personalized score.

Worth-It Score

46/100

Heavy lift

Anderson lands in the heavy lift band for a typical family. The combination of $23,544 in yearly net price and $26,700 in median debt asks a lot relative to median earnings of $42,101. This does not make the school wrong for every student, but it does mean the price deserves a closer test.

Score breakdown

The public version of the score weighs affordability, after graduation outcomes, and repayment burden.

Affordability

40% weight

38/100

The yearly net price is doing real work against the score and raises the financing burden quickly.

Outcome

40% weight

32/100

The outcome data does not create enough margin to fully offset the cost.

Repayment

20% weight

89/100

Median debt stays in a more comfortable repayment range for a typical graduate.

The numbers behind the score

Median net price per year

$23,544

Median earnings 10 years out

$42,101

Median debt at graduation

$26,700

Graduation rate

67%

At Anderson, a typical graduate carries about $26,700 in student debt and earns roughly $42,101 ten years after enrolling. On a standard 10-year repayment plan, that works out to about $304 per month, or 9% of pre-tax income. That sits at the tighter end of a workable borrower range.

What this means for your family

Anderson is a private nonprofit four year school in Anderson, SC. Private pricing can swing more dramatically based on aid, so your personalized score matters more here than the national average view alone.

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Common questions about Anderson

The median net price at Anderson is $23,544 per year. That is the average yearly price after typical grant aid for students in the public federal data, not the published sticker price.

Get your personalized Worth-It score

National averages are a starting point. Plug in your actual aid offer, intended major, and family situation to get a score that reflects your specific picture.

The Worth-It Score weighs affordability (40%), after graduation outcomes (40%), and repayment burden (20%). Underlying data points come from publicly available federal higher education reporting. See full methodology →