Wichita Boasts Regional Affordability

Looking west on Douglas Avenue in downtown Wichita.
Looking west on Douglas Avenue in downtown Wichita.

 

As the state’s most affordable research institution, Wichita State University is proud to open its doors to students from all walks. A big help in keeping costs low comes from Wichita itself. Kansas’ most populous city is also one of the most affordable in the region while still offering all of the amenities of a major metro. Looking at two online cost-of-living calculators from Nerdwallet and AdvisorSmith and comparing the cost-of-living index between Wichita and several Shocker City Tuition Discount metro areas, it is no wonder more students from these areas are choosing Wichita State.

Kansas City

Students from northeast Kansas plus Missouri make up almost 13 percent of WSU’s campus population, with a large chunk hailing from KC. The City of Fountains is a beautiful and growing area on the banks of the Missouri and Kansas Rivers – most likely why the cost-of-living is five percent higher than Wichita. This is primarily due to rising rent and housing prices in the KC metro, estimated to be 30 percent higher than in Wichita.

Dallas-Fort Worth

Wichita State has seen a more than 300 percent growth in Texas students since 2010 thanks to five metro areas receiving in-state tuition rates as part of the Shocker City Partnership (DFW, Houston, San Antonio, Austin and Waco). DFW students in particular have benefited from a 13 percent lower cost-of-living in Wichita. Like KC, rent and housing expenses are nearly 30 percent lower, but Wichita also boasts 15 percent lower healthcare costs than in DFW, especially estimated doctors and dentist visits.

Houston

Another big Shocker City area, the Houston metro is estimated to be around 3-10 percent more expensive than living in Wichita. Housing is once again the bugaboo with rent in Houston averaging more than $300 per month higher in comparison.

Denver

Moving from the shadow of the Rockies to the plains could save you some coin. All three in-state tuition metro areas in Colorado (Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo) are pricier than Wichita, but Denver packs the biggest punch. It is estimated that the cost-of-living index in Denver is 20-30 percent higher with housing/rent costing a whopping 50 percent more.

Omaha

Both Colorado and Nebraska students have benefited from Wichita State tuition discounts with both populations steadily growing over the past four years. Nebraska’s largest city is one of three where students who live in the metro receive in-state tuition at Wichita State, the other two being Lincoln and Grand Island. Omaha itself is estimated to have a 2-7 percent higher cost-of-living than Wichita thanks to more money spent on rent mixed with higher gas prices.

Be sure to read up on Wichita State’s costs of attendance, tuition discounts and scholarship opportunities.

 

 

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