Cost of College Tuition in Nebraska (2026)
Nebraska college tuition cost calculator: in-state $9,516, out-of-state $26,736, room and board, Nebraska Opportunity Grant aid notes.
College tuition in Nebraska runs roughly $9,516 per year for in-state students at public 4-year institutions, and roughly $26,736 for non-residents.
What you need to know
College tuition in Nebraska runs roughly $9,516 per year for in-state students at public 4-year institutions, and roughly $26,736 for non-residents. The differential — about $17,220 per year — is the state-residency subsidy that Nebraska appropriations fund for residents who attended Nebraska schools or established residency for tuition purposes.
This calculator estimates a single year of tuition at public 4-year Nebraska schools and adds an optional room-and-board figure when on-campus housing is part of the budget. The named Nebraska public universities — University of Nebraska-Lincoln, University of Nebraska at Omaha, University of Nebraska Kearney — sit within the in-state range, with flagship campuses near the upper end and regional campuses near the lower end. For broader cost-of-attendance planning that includes books, fees, transportation, and personal expenses, layer those amounts onto the tuition figure shown.
Nebraska runs the Nebraska Opportunity Grant, which can reduce in-state tuition substantially for eligible residents. Need-based grant for Nebraska residents attending eligible Nebraska public and private institutions. Awards up to $5,000 per year; eligibility based on FAFSA EFC. Administered by the Nebraska Coordinating Commission for Postsecondary Education. Nebraska Revised Statutes section 85-502 provides in-state tuition eligibility for qualifying non-citizen students who attended Nebraska high school for three or more years. The University of Nebraska system Board of Regents sets tuition across all four NU campuses. For broader savings planning, the savings goal calculator can estimate how long a target college-cost reserve takes, and the college-cost national calculator compares Nebraska against other states.
Nebraska tuition breakdown
The Nebraska estimate uses two primary tuition figures sourced from the National Center for Education Statistics IPEDS College Navigator system. **In-state public 4-year tuition** is documented at $9,000-10,200; the calculator midpoint is $9,516. University of Nebraska-Lincoln in-state tuition and required fees, academic year 2025-2026. Nebraska State College system is lower.
**Out-of-state public 4-year tuition** is documented at $25,000-28,000; the calculator midpoint is $26,736. University of Nebraska-Lincoln non-resident tuition and required fees.
The room-and-board toggle adds an estimated $13,500 per year, sourced from NCES national averages for public 4-year on-campus housing and meals. Actual room-and-board figures vary substantially by metro area and by school; flagship-campus housing in high-cost-of-living areas can run materially higher, while regional campuses may run lower. Treat the room-and-board figure as a national-average estimate, not a school-specific quote.
Nebraska in-state vs out-of-state tuition
Public universities in Nebraska charge in-state tuition to Nebraska residents (typically requiring 12 months of continuous physical presence with intent to remain) and a higher out-of-state rate to non-residents. The Nebraska differential is approximately $17,220 per year, which is the cost-of-residency-status decision a non-resident family faces when comparing Nebraska schools against home-state options.
Reciprocity and exchange programs can reduce out-of-state tuition for students from neighboring states. Common programs include the Western Undergraduate Exchange (16 western states), the Midwest Student Exchange (9 midwestern states), the Academic Common Market (15 southern states), and the New England Regional Student Program (6 New England states). Eligibility depends on the student's home state, the chosen Nebraska school, and the specific major. Check the host school's admissions site for current participation.
Establishing residency for tuition purposes is harder than for voting or driver-licensing in most states. Nebraska typically requires continuous physical presence, financial independence from out-of-state parents, and clear intent to remain (lease, employment, voter registration, vehicle registration). A student who moves to Nebraska only to attend college rarely qualifies for in-state tuition during the first year.
Nebraska Opportunity Grant and Nebraska aid context
Nebraska runs the Nebraska Opportunity Grant: Need-based grant for Nebraska residents attending eligible Nebraska public and private institutions. Awards up to $5,000 per year; eligibility based on FAFSA EFC. Administered by the Nebraska Coordinating Commission for Postsecondary Education.
For Nebraska residents, layering Nebraska Opportunity Grant on top of federal aid (Pell Grant, federal student loans) can reduce the net price below the sticker tuition. Federal aid eligibility is driven by the FAFSA. Nebraska Opportunity Grant eligibility may have a separate application or use the FAFSA's data; check the Nebraska Opportunity Grant site listed in the sources for the current process and deadline.
This calculator shows sticker tuition (the published price), not net price (sticker minus aid). Net-price calculators provided by individual schools are the most accurate way to estimate what a specific student will actually pay. The Nebraska sticker tuition figure here is the planning baseline before any aid is applied. The Life category hub lists other major life-event cost calculators including this one.
Nebraska 529 plan tax characterization
Nebraska offers a 529 plan tax deduction or credit limited to contributions to the in-state plan. Nebraska allows a state income tax deduction for contributions to the Nebraska Educational Savings Trust (NEST) or TD Ameritrade 529. Applies to Nebraska-sponsored plans only.
529 plans are tax-advantaged college savings accounts named for Section 529 of the Internal Revenue Code. All states' 529 plans grow federal-tax-free and allow tax-free withdrawal for qualified education expenses (tuition, room and board for at-least-half-time students, books, fees, computers). The state-level layer adds variation: some states offer a deduction or credit for contributions to the in-state plan only, some offer parity (any state's plan), and some offer no state-level benefit.
For Nebraska families weighing 529 contributions, the in-state plan is usually worth comparing on three dimensions: state tax benefit (above), investment options and expense ratios, and any matching grant programs. The 529 plan account belongs to the contributor, not the beneficiary, which means a parent or grandparent retains control even after the child reaches majority. Funds can also be repurposed (with tax implications) if the named beneficiary doesn't need them for education.
Other Nebraska cost-of-attendance factors
Beyond tuition and room and board, the published Nebraska cost-of-attendance figures usually include: course-related fees ($1,500-$3,000 per year), books and supplies ($1,000-$1,500), transportation ($1,000-$2,500 depending on distance from home), and personal expenses ($2,000-$3,500). Adding these typical line items to the tuition midpoint produces the complete annual cost-of-attendance estimate the financial-aid office uses for federal loan limits.
Nebraska-specific cost variation appears in housing, transportation, and metro food costs. University of Nebraska-Lincoln sits in a metro with Nebraska-typical living costs; regional campuses in lower-cost-of-living parts of Nebraska can be materially cheaper for off-campus housing. The calculator's room-and-board figure is a national average and should be replaced with school-specific data when comparing real Nebraska options. For broader off-campus housing budgeting, the home affordability calculator can help families estimate what they can afford on a single income.
Over four years, the cumulative Nebraska sticker cost (in-state tuition + national-average room and board) reaches roughly $92,064. Out-of-state students paying the higher tuition reach roughly $160,944 over four years. These are sticker figures; actual paid prices after aid are typically lower for in-state students with demonstrated need.
Ways Nebraska families plan for college tuition
Nebraska families typically combine three funding sources: 529 plan savings, federal aid (Pell Grant and federal student loans via the FAFSA), and Nebraska Opportunity Grant. Layering all three reduces the share that must come from current income, parent loans (PLUS), or private student loans.
For families starting early, a 529 plan opened at the child's birth and funded with consistent monthly contributions can cover a meaningful share of Nebraska sticker tuition by the time the child enrolls. The Nebraska state tax treatment described above adds an annual benefit on top of the federal tax-free growth. The emergency fund calculator can help families maintain a separate cash reserve while contributing to the 529.
For families starting later, the Nebraska Opportunity Grant application deadline matters more than the savings horizon. Late college planning still benefits from a complete and on-time FAFSA, Nebraska Opportunity Grant application, and direct outreach to the Nebraska school's financial-aid office about institutional aid. School-specific net-price calculators give a more accurate cost picture than the sticker number shown here.
State-specific note
Nebraska public 4-year tuition ranges from $9,000-10,200 for in-state residents to $25,000-28,000 for non-residents. Named Nebraska public universities include University of Nebraska-Lincoln, University of Nebraska at Omaha, University of Nebraska Kearney. The Nebraska Opportunity Grant is the primary state aid program. Tax authority context: Nebraska Revised Statutes Chapter 85 (University of Nebraska); Neb. Rev. Stat. section 85-502 (residency); Neb. Rev. Stat. section 77-2715.09 (NEST 529 deduction).
How we calculate this
This calculator estimates single-year college tuition at public 4-year Nebraska institutions using IPEDS-sourced figures. In-state tuition is set at $9,516 ($9,000-10,200); out-of-state tuition is set at $26,736 ($25,000-28,000). When the room-and-board option is selected, the calculator adds an estimated $13,500 per year using NCES national averages for public 4-year on-campus housing and meals. The estimate applies 0.85x and 1.15x range multipliers to reflect tuition variance across Nebraska flagship versus regional campuses; this range is narrower than the multipliers used for legal-fee estimates because tuition is a published sticker price rather than a fee estimate. Sticker prices do not reflect aid; net-price calculators provided by individual Nebraska schools are more accurate for specific students.
Key takeaways
- Nebraska in-state public 4-year tuition runs roughly $8,089-$10,943 per year before aid.
- Nebraska out-of-state public 4-year tuition runs roughly $22,726-$30,746 per year before aid.
- Adding national-average room and board brings the in-state estimate to $19,564-$26,468 and the out-of-state estimate to $34,201-$46,271.
- Nebraska runs the Nebraska Opportunity Grant, which can reduce in-state sticker tuition for eligible residents.
Frequently Asked Questions
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</script>Data sources
- NCES College Navigator - University of Nebraska-LincolnVerified 2026-05-15
- Nebraska Coordinating Commission for Postsecondary Education - Financial AidVerified 2026-05-15
- NEST 529 Direct - Nebraska Tax BenefitsVerified 2026-05-15
- NCES Digest of Education Statistics — Average undergraduate tuition, fees, room, and boardVerified 2026-05-15