University of South Alabama: cost & net price by income
Mobile, Alabama
The average net price at University of South Alabama is about $15,142 per year — what students actually pay after grants and scholarships, not the sticker price. Families earning under $30k pay about $12,906 a year, while families earning $110k+ pay around $21,591. Published in-state tuition is $9,676. These are federal figures (U.S. Dept. of Education College Scorecard), so they reflect real aid.
What you'll pay, by family income
Average net price per year after grants and scholarships.
- Under $30k$12,906/yr
- $30k–$48k$13,717/yr
- $48k–$75k$17,568/yr
- $75k–$110k$21,445/yr
- $110k+$21,591/yr
University of South Alabama cost at a glance
- Average net price
- $15,142
- In-state tuition
- $9,676
- Out-of-state tuition
- $18,652
- Students receiving aid
- 97%
FindU Value Grade
Outcomes weighed against what students actually pay.
FindU Grades are FindU editorial ratings derived from public federal data (IPEDS / U.S. Dept. of Education College Scorecard). They are one opinion — not an official measure or a prediction of any individual outcome.
Cost FAQ
- How much does University of South Alabama actually cost after aid?
- The average net price at University of South Alabama is about $15,142 per year — the real cost after grants and scholarships, which is usually far below the published sticker price.
- How much does University of South Alabama cost for low-income families?
- For families earning under $30k, the net price at University of South Alabama is about $12,906 per year after need-based aid.
- What is tuition at University of South Alabama?
- At University of South Alabama, published in-state tuition is $9,676 and out-of-state tuition is $18,652 per year (before aid). Most students pay less than the sticker price once grants and scholarships are applied.
- Is University of South Alabama worth the cost?
- FindU gives University of South Alabama a value grade of B+ — weighing outcomes against what students actually pay. (FindU editorial rating from public data — not an official measure.)