Skip to main content

ASU makes Princeton Review's list of 'Best Bang for Your Tuition Buck'

The university is the only Arizona school on 2018 'Colleges That Pay You Back' list


A group of students is silhouetted against a sunset
January 17, 2018

Arizona State University has been named to the 2018 Princeton Review list of “Colleges That Pay You Back: The 200 Schools That Give You the Best Bang for Your Tuition Buck.”

The Princeton Review, which rates colleges and universities on a host of factors, cited ASU’s “stellar academics, affordable cost and strong career prospects for graduates.” ASU has been named to this nationwide list every year since its inaugural publishing in 2015. This year, ASU is the only school in Arizona to make the list.

Other universities on the list include Stanford University, Yale University, MIT, University of California Los Angeles and Texas A&M.

“ASU offers the highest-quality education possible at the lowest possible price with a tremendous return on investment for students,” ASU President Michael M. Crow said. “Nine out of 10 undergraduates have a job within three months of graduation. And with more than 8,000 companies recruiting students every day, ASU is the hub of talent for the state of Arizona.”

Students quoted in the Princeton Review ranking noted ASU’s focus on innovation and efforts to “personalize every student’s experience,” along with “endless … opportunities for success.” Students also noted ASU’s highly ranked journalism, business and engineering schools along with the abundance of research opportunities across academic disciplines.

ASU’s undergraduate tuition is the lowest among public universities in Arizona. More than 80 percent of resident undergraduates receive some type of financial aid, which was also a factor in the Princeton Review ranking.

Dozens of companies such as Ford Motor Company, Mayo Clinic, Charles Schwab and State Farm have called ASU a top-tier university for recruiting and hiring. The average starting salary for ASU undergraduates is $43,000 and $63,000 for graduate students. 

More Arts, humanities and education

 

An upward view of a person holding a book open in between aisles of book shelving

Engineering knowledge: Recommended reading from Fulton Schools faculty, staff

In this 13th edition of the annual Essential Reading feature, 10 more faculty and staff members in the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering at Arizona State University join in carrying on the…

Woman sits among ASU Gammage seats with chin on hand and notebook in lap

ASU Gammage Scholar and MFA student forges path to her future

Editor’s note: This story is part of a series of profiles of notable spring 2024 graduates. Theater was an escape and an outlet for Crestcencia Ortiz-Barnett as a young girl in Detroit. “I learned…

Two blonde women looking at each other.

Data science student investigates Arizona education system, reform through Steve Jobs Archive fellowship

Arizona State University student Brinlee Kidd was one of nine people across the U.S. chosen for the inaugural Steve Jobs Archive (SJA) Fellowship, launched last year with the goal of allowing young…