The two-year student loan default rate measures how many graduates from the institution go into default on their student loans with two years of graduation. This is a complicated metric with many factors, but in general colleges and universities with high student loan default rates may indicate that students have trouble finding employment or well-paying jobs after college. This may mean that the institution has a less-established reputation with employers or that it graduates a higher percentage of students with degrees in lower-wage fields of study.
| Rank | Institution | Student Loan Default Rate (2 Year) | Acceptance Rate | SAT Score | Your Est. Net Price Avg. Net Price | Median Starting Salary | Save |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cornerstone University | 5 | 73.16 | 1,010 – 1,240 | 23147 | 42598 | |
| 2 | University of Michigan-Dearborn | 5.8 | 55.61 | 1,000 – 1,260 | 12798 | 50389 |
#2
University of Michigan-Dearborn
|
| 3 | Aquinas College | 6.2 | 89.88 | 920 – 1,150 | 19890 | 40161 |
#3
Aquinas College
|
| 4 | Cleary University | 6.5 | 50.97 | 950 – 1,170 | 24965 | 55077 |
#4
Cleary University
|
| 5 | Indiana Institute of Technology | 7.6 | 57.13 | 950 – 1,160 | 22148 | 29717 |
#5
Indiana Institute of Technology
|
| 6 | Rochester Christian University | 7.7 | 65.3 | 850 – 1,110 | 19660 | 40813 |
#6
Rochester Christian University
|
| 7 | University of Northwestern Ohio | 9.5 | 80.35 | -- | 18794 | 45639 |
#7
University of Northwestern Ohio
|
| 8 | Lourdes University | 11.1 | 74.1 | 930 – 1,140 | 22614 | 40158 |
#8
Lourdes University
|
School data is from 2022–2023 (top 500 results shown) for schools with at least 100 undergraduate students.
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