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My Net Price Estimate

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created: December 15, 2025

Direct Cost Estimate

Estimated Direct Cost of Attendance (out-of-state) This is an estimate of the annual direct costs that you will be billed from the institution.

Tuition & Fees $40,392
Housing & Food $17,205
Total $57,597/yr

Estimated Grants and Scholarships

Pell Grant $7,395
OSU Grant $11,172
Total $18,567/yr

Estimated Direct Cost after Grants and Scholarships

Estimated Net Direct Cost
(Estimated Direct Cost of Attendance minus total grants and scholarships)
$39,030

Options to Pay Direct Cost

Estimated Loan Options

Federal Direct Subsidized Loan $3,500
Federal Direct Unsubsidized Loan $2,000
Total $5,500/yr

Other options $33,530/ yr

  • Military and/or National Service benefits
  • Federal Direct PLUS Loan
  • Non-Federal private education loan
  • Expected Student Aid Index (FM): -$1,500
    (As calculated using information reported on this calculator)



Net Price Estimate




Estimated Total Cost of Attendance (out-of-state) Cost of Attendance includes tuition and fees; food and housing; books, course materials, supplies, and equipment; transportation; and miscellaneous personal expenses.
Video (0:35) What is Cost of Attendance?

Tuition & Fees $40,392
Housing & Food $17,205
Books & Supplies $600
Transportation $879
Personal Expenses $2,817
Total $61,893/yr

Estimated Grants and Scholarships
Video (0:56) What is a Scholarship?

Pell Grant
Video (1:31) What is a Pell Grant?
$7,395
OSU Grant $11,172
Total $18,567/yr

What you will pay for college Your estimated net cost per year based on the data you provided. This is the estimated cost of attendance minus total grants and scholarships.

Estimated Net Price
Total Cost of Attendance minus Estimated Grants and Scholarships
$43,326

Options to Pay Net Price




Estimated Loan Options Estimated loan amounts shown. Your loan eligibility may vary.
Video (0:58) Types of Federal Student Loans

Federal Direct Subsidized Loan $3,500
Federal Direct Unsubsidized Loan $2,000
Total $5,500/yr

Other Scholarship Opportunities

WUE Scholarship: Beginning in Fall 2021, Oregon State University will be a participating institution with the Western Undergraduate Exchange (WUE) program.

Residents of the following states and territories may be eligible for tuition at 150% of resident tuition (renewable for 4 years):

Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah, Washington, Wyoming, Guam, and the North Mariana Islands.

WUE Scholarships are competitive and awarded based on a holistic review of your application for admission. Only about 10% of students from a WUE state will be offered the WUE Scholarship, but many more will receive Provost Scholarships to reward them for their academic success and offset the cost of non-resident tuition. Awards are only for new, entering students for Fall 2021 and beyond.

Presidential Scholarship: The Presidential Scholarship, OSU’s most prestigious and competitive scholarship, awards up to $40,000 ($10,000 per year, renewable for up to four years total) to new resident freshmen students attending the Corvallis or Bend campuses.

OSU Foundation Scholarships: OSU has many scholarship opportunities for prospective and current students.

Other options $37,826 $151,304 / yr

  • Federal Direct PLUS Loan
  • Non-Federal private education loan
    Video (1:18) What is a Private loan?
  • Expected Student Aid Index (FM): -$1,500
    (As calculated using information reported on this calculator)

Comparison Shopping

Below are College Raptor® estimates of your net price to attend other colleges that students who ultimately attend Oregon State University also consider.


Note: These figures are only net price estimates based on available information from Oregon State University, and may be inaccurate. We encourage you to consider results from each school's Net Price Calculator and/or your actual financial aid offers and cost at schools you are considering before finalizing your college decision.

Paying for College

Glossary

Estimated Direct Cost of Attendance: The total amount (not including grants, scholarships, loans, and work-study) that it will cost you to go to school during the 2026-27 school year. Cost of Attendance (COA) includes tuition and fees; living expenses (housing and food); and allowances for books, course materials, supplies, equipment, transportation, miscellaneous personal expenses, and loan fees. It can also include dependent care; an allowance for the rental or purchase of a personal computer; costs related to a disability; and reasonable costs for eligible study-abroad programs. For students attending less than half-time, the COA includes tuition and fees; an allowance for books, supplies, and transportation; and dependent care expenses. Your actual costs will vary according to your residency, enrollment status, personal lifestyle choices, and academic program and coursework.

Grants and Scholarships: Student aid funds that do not have to be repaid. Grants are often need-based, while scholarships are usually merit-based. Occasionally you might have to pay back part or all of a grant if, for example, you withdraw from school before finishing a semester.

Net Price: An estimate of the actual cost that you or your family will need to pay during the 2026-27 school year to cover education expenses at a particular school. Net price is determined by taking the institution's cost of attendance and subtracting your grants and scholarships.

Work-Study: A federal and/or state student aid program that provides part-time employment that must be earned while you are enrolled in school to help pay your educational expenses.

Loans: Borrowed money that must be repaid with interest. Loans from the federal government typically have a lower interest rate than loans from private lenders. Federal loans, listed from most advantageous to least advantageous, are Direct Subsidized Loans, Direct Unsubsidized Loans, and Direct PLUS Loans. You can find more information about federal loans at StudentAid.gov.

Federal Direct Subsidized Loans: Loans made to eligible undergraduate students who demonstrate financial need to help cover the costs of higher education at a college or career school.

Federal Direct Unsubsidized Loans: Loans made to eligible undergraduate, graduate, and professional students, but in this case, the student does not have to demonstrate financial need to be eligible for the loan.

Federal Direct PLUS Loans: Loans made to graduate or professional students and parents of dependent undergraduate students to help pay for education expenses not covered by other financial aid.

Student Aid Index (also referred to as SAI): A number used by a school to calculate how much need-based financial aid you are eligible to receive based on the financial information you provided on your Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). The SAI is not the amount of money your family will have to pay for college, nor is it the amount of federal student aid you will receive. The family contribution is reported to you on your FAFSA Submission Summary, also known as the FSS. The FSS is a paper or electronic document that provides basic information about your eligibility for federal student aid and lists your responses to the questions on the FAFSA.