Cost of attendance is the estimated amount you’ll pay for college in a given year. It’s an official number determined by each college and includes tuition and fees, books and supplies, room and board, transportation and personal expenses. Sometimes, people refer to cost of attendance as COA.
You can find the cost of attendance on your school’s website. There may be multiple COAs listed that differ by housing situation. For example, the cost for a student living on campus will be different from a commuter student’s.
Cost of attendance represents the full price of a college before any aid — it’s the school’s “sticker price.” However, many students receive financial aid, grants or scholarships and pay less.
How is cost of attendance used?
Colleges use cost of attendance to determine how much financial aid you’re eligible for. Schools calculate aid eligibility by subtracting your expected family contribution, or EFC, from the school’s cost of attendance. This figures the maximum amount of need-based aid you can receive.
The EFC is based on information you enter on the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, or FAFSA. It represents the federal government’s estimation for how much your family can afford to pay for education, either out of pocket or through student loans.
For example, if your school’s COA is $20,000 and your EFC is $7,000, then your financial need is $13,000. Need-based aid can include scholarships, Pell Grants, work-study and subsidized federal student loans, where the government pays the interest while you are in school.
The amount of aid you get may be less than your calculated financial need.
You can get an idea of what you can expect to actually pay by using a net price calculator that considers the official cost of attendance, your EFC and the aid available at that school. Every school that accepts federal aid has one. Use the net price to compare your costs at different schools; the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau has a cost of attendance comparison tool to help with your research.
Does cost of attendance affect student loans?
Cost of attendance affects the amount of student loans you can borrow. You can’t borrow more than the cost of attendance minus other aid, and your school tells lenders — government and private — how much loan money you’re eligible for.
Federal student loans also have limits not related to cost of attendance. For example, a dependent freshman student can only borrow up to $5,500 in federal student loans regardless of need or COA. If you need more money after you reach your federal student loan limit, you can fill the gap with other resources like family savings or merit-based scholarships or grants. You can meet any leftover amount beyond that with private student loans.
Key terms in this story
Cost of attendance (COA): Estimated annual school expenses, including tuition and fees, books and supplies, room and board, transportation and personal expenses. Colleges subtract your expected family contribution, or EFC, from their cost of attendance to calculate the maximum amount of need-based aid you can receive. Expected family contribution is the amount the federal government estimates your family can pay for college.
Expected family contribution (EFC): An estimate from the federal government of how much money your family can afford to pay toward your college education. Schools subtract your EFC from their cost of attendance to calculate the maximum amount of need-based aid you can receive.
Net price calculator: Tool that calculates the college’s total cost — including tuition, room and board and books — minus any grants and scholarships that the student is eligible for. All colleges that offer federal financial aid must have an online net price calculator to help students and parents considering out-of-pocket costs.