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Home / News / Davidson College Goes Tuition-Free For Families Earning Up To $175,000

Davidson College Goes Tuition-Free For Families Earning Up To $175,000

Updated: July 12, 2026 By Robert Farrington | < 1 Min Read Leave a Comment

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College Students Walking On Campus

Davidson College will be tuition-free for students from families earning $175,000 or less starting in the fall of 2027, the North Carolina liberal arts college announced this week. Families earning $85,000 or less will pay nothing at all — tuition, fees, housing, and meals are fully covered.

Davidson's total cost of attendance hit $86,865 this academic year, up nearly $11,000 in just three years. The new income thresholds are designed to cut through sticker shock and encourage middle income families to apply knowing they likely won't pay the full price.

The Details

The simplified pricing has three tiers:

  • Total family income of $85,000 or less: all direct costs covered (tuition, fees, housing, and meals)
  • Income between $85,000 and $175,000: tuition-free, with potential additional financial aid based on calculated need
  • Income above $175,000: financial aid packages that meet 100% of calculated need with no loans, Davidson's policy for nearly 20 years

The thresholds are based on adjusted gross income and assume assets typical for that income level. The pricing holds for all four years as long as a family's income and assets continue to qualify, and it applies to new students entering in fall 2027. Families still must file the FAFSA and CSS Profile.

By The Numbers

  • 70% of Davidson students receive financial assistance
  • $66,000 is the average aid package
  • Roughly three-quarters of Davidson alumni graduate debt-free
  • 20.5% of the most recent first-year class is Pell Grant-eligible

The Big Picture

Davidson joins a wave of wealthy private colleges converting opaque financial aid formulas into simple income cutoffs, but some schools have set the bar higher. 

Harvard and MIT both made tuition free for families earning up to $200,000, and both cover essentially all costs below $100,000. Penn raised its full-tuition scholarship threshold from $140,000 to $200,000 and stopped counting a family's primary home as an asset. Whitman College went a different direction, capping tuition at 10% of family income with no income cutoff at all.

Against that field, Davidson's $175,000 tuition-free line and $85,000 full-ride line trail the $200,000 and $100,000 marks at the richest universities. But Davidson remains one of few U.S. colleges that are need-blind for domestic admissions, meet 100% of demonstrated need, and package financial aid with no student loans.

How This Connects

We've been tracking the rise of these income-based pledges in our running list of tuition-free colleges, and Davidson's move fits a bigger pattern: sticker prices are becoming fiction. Private colleges now discount tuition 56% on average (a record high) and schools like Whitman are abandoning cutoffs entirely in favor of income-linked pricing.

The new structure applies to students applying for fall 2027 admission. Expect more selective colleges to publish simple income cutoffs as they compete for middle-income applicants who assume (often wrongly) that an $87,000 sticker price is the real price. Our research has shown that less than 1-in-8 families actually pay full sticker price.

A family earning $150,000 can now cross Davidson's tuition off the bill entirely. But with Harvard and MIT at $200,000, the free-tuition arms race isn't over and Davidson's move suggests even schools outside the Ivy-plus tier feel the pressure to compete on price clarity.

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Robert Farrington
Robert Farrington

Robert Farrington is the founder of The College Investor and is widely recognized as one of the nation’s leading voices on student loan debt and saving for college. He holds an MBA from UC San Diego Rady School of Management and has spent over 15 years researching, writing, and advising on student loans, 529 plans, financial aid programs, and saving and investing for young professionals.

Robert has been featured in the The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, NBC News, and Forbes, where he has been a regular personal finance contributor for over a decade. His work combines both professional expertise and personal experience – he successfully navigated his own student loan repayment journey and has helped thousands of readers do the same.

He is committed to making the intersection of personal finance and education transparent and accessible. You can learn more about Robert on the About Page or on his personal site RobertFarrington.com.

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