Home / Worth-It Scores / North Carolina / Bennett

Is Bennett College worth it?

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

Worth-It Score

16/100

Heavy lift

Bennett lands in the heavy lift band for a typical family. The combination of $28,299 in yearly net price and $28,130 in median debt asks a lot relative to median earnings of $36,654. 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

0/100

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

Outcome

40% weight

0/100

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

Repayment

20% weight

79/100

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

The numbers behind the score

Median net price per year

$28,299

Median earnings 10 years out

$36,654

Median debt at graduation

$28,130

Graduation rate

23%

At Bennett, a typical graduate carries about $28,130 in student debt and earns roughly $36,654 ten years after enrolling. On a standard 10-year repayment plan, that works out to about $320 per month, or 10% of pre-tax income. That sits at the tighter end of a workable borrower range.

What this means for your family

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

Similar schools worth comparing

These schools share a similar sector, geography, or price range.

Common questions about Bennett

The median net price at Bennett is $28,299 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 →