The University of Minnesota is moving ahead with a 15 percent tuition hike for most out-of-state students despite concerns that it may scare away potential recruits.
The proposal, which would boost the sticker price for nonresidents by more than $3,700 a year, was approved Thursday by a committee of the Board of Regents. The new tuition rate, $28,734 a year, is expected to be finalized by the board Friday.
It would be the second double-digit increase in a row for out-of-state undergraduates, who saw tuition rise by 12.5 percent this fall. The change would not affect Minnesota residents, or those from Wisconsin and the Dakotas, who now pay $12,800 a year at the Twin Cities campus.
"If you look at what a degree costs for [nonresidents] at our peer institutions, ours is lower," said President Eric Kaler, who recommended the increase. "I think this tuition price reflects the value that a University of Minnesota degree can command in the marketplace."
University officials said they would limit the increases for existing students to 5.5 percent a year, while new students would pay the higher rates next fall. The U will wait until spring to set next year's rates for Minnesota residents.
For several years, some regents and state legislators have been calling for a dramatic boost in tuition for nonresidents, arguing that they pay too little while Minnesota residents pay too much. In the Big Ten Conference, only one school (the University of Nebraska) charges out-of-state students less than the University of Minnesota. The average nonresident rate is $32,600 a year, according to data compiled by the University of Wisconsin.
Last year, the regents set a five-year goal of raising the U's nonresident rate to the midpoint of the Big Ten — an estimated $35,000 a year by 2021. Under the new plan, however, it could reach that number by the fall of 2019.
But a number of regents and student groups have raised concerns that such steep hikes would unfairly burden many families and undermine efforts to recruit top students from other states.