Open any general-audience publication this fall and you will read about colleges costing $80,000 a year. That number is technically true. It is also wildly unrepresentative.
The actual price distribution
Of 1,791 four-year U.S. institutions reporting full Cost of Attendance (tuition + fees + books + room/board, before financial aid):
| COA range | Count | Share |
|---|---|---|
| <$20,000 | 188 | 10.5% |
| $20,000–29,999 | 484 | 27.0% |
| $30,000–39,999 | 451 | 25.2% |
| $40,000–49,999 | 251 | 14.0% |
| $50,000–59,999 | 152 | 8.5% |
| $60,000–69,999 | 109 | 6.1% |
| $70,000–79,999 | 49 | 2.7% |
| $80,000+ | 107 | 5.9% |
The cultural narrative is built on a 0.3% slice of institutions whose actual paying customers represent a still-smaller slice. The other 99.7% of U.S. higher ed is operating at less than half that price point — and competing for prospective families whose first impression has been calibrated by headlines about a price point they will never pay.
The sticker-vs-net gap is enormous, especially for low-income families
Net price (the number families actually pay after grants and scholarships), private nonprofit four-years, by family income:
| Family income | Median net price (private 4-yr) | Median net price (public 4-yr) |
|---|---|---|
| $0–$30K | $17,887 | $10,206 |
| $30K–$48K | $18,010 | $10,742 |
| $48K–$75K | $19,931 | $13,514 |
| $75K–$110K | $23,683 | $17,423 |
| $110K+ | $29,302 | $20,787 |
Three findings the average prospective family would never extract on their own:
1. Private ≠ unaffordable for the bottom half of the income distribution
For families earning under $48K, the median private nonprofit charges almost the same net price as the median public university for that income tier ($17,887 vs. $10,206). The "private = unaffordable" reflex is wrong for the bottom half of the income distribution.
2. The net-price curve at private nonprofits is gentler than at publics
Going from $0–30K income to $110K+ raises private net price by $11,415. At publics, it raises it by $10,581. In percentage terms, the public-college sticker pain hits low-income families harder relative to their starting price.
3. The hidden $16,978/year
The gap between sticker ($34,865) and net for low-income families ($17,887) at private nonprofits is $16,978 per year. That is the single largest piece of unspoken information in the entire prospective-student journey.
The sticker is not just unhelpful in your funnel. It is the proximate cause of your highest-leverage prospects never starting an application.
Where this becomes an AEO problem
When a prospective family asks ChatGPT "how much does [your school] cost", the model now needs a number. Three sources compete:
- Your homepage tuition page (often shows sticker)
- The Scorecard's reported COA (sticker)
- The Scorecard's net price tables (the actual number — but harder to surface)
The model picks whichever is most prominent and machine-readable. Almost every university's machine-readable signal is the sticker. So the AI answer is the sticker. So the prospect rules you out.
The fix is mechanical:
- Mark up your tuition page with both COA and a net-price table by income tier. Use
OfferandMonetaryAmountschema for both. - Publish a net-price calculator that returns a number in under 30 seconds, not a 14-page form.
- Put the median net price for each income tier in the first scroll of the cost page.
- Submit those numbers to Wikipedia, Wikidata, and any third-party data partner whose pages your AI surfaces are pulling from.
What "good" looks like
The institutions that have done this well share one pattern: their cost page leads with the question prospective families actually ask. Not "what is our tuition?" — that's the institution's question. The family's question is "what would we actually pay?"
The page that answers the family's question, with public sources cited, in the first scroll, gets surfaced. The page that answers the institution's question gets buried.
Bottom line
Lead with net price. Lead with affordability calculators in the first scroll. Lead with the income-tier table above. The sticker is not just unhelpful in your funnel; it is the proximate cause of your highest-leverage prospects never starting an application.
If your cost page is doing the institution's job rather than the family's, that's the highest-converting fix on the list this quarter.