St. Olaf College Scholarships (2026–2027)
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Last Updated on March 20, 2026- Tuition, housing, and what families actually pay on average
- Automatic merit ranges and who typically qualifies
- Competitive and hidden-gem scholarships worth a look
- Honors perks and how to stack awards the smart way
📊 Admissions Snapshot
- Acceptance Rate: ~48%
- Middle 50% ACT: 28–32
- Middle 50% SAT: 1310–1460
- Average GPA (HS): 3.73
Source: St. Olaf College Office of Admissions. Middle 50% = the range where half of admitted students fall.
Comparing multiple schools? Try the Scholarship Tool to search by GPA, test scores, and state →
St. Olaf at a Glance
https://wp.stolaf.edu/financialaid/academic-scholarships/
https://wp.stolaf.edu/financialaid/merit-scholarships/
https://wp.stolaf.edu/financialaid/bridge/
https://bigfuture.collegeboard.org/colleges/st-olaf-college/tuition-and-costs
💰 Cost of Attendance at St. Olaf College (2026–2027)
📅 2026–2027 Planning Note: The costs below reflect the most recently published figures (2025–2026). Universities typically finalize the next year’s rates in the spring, and we’ll update this page once the university releases official 2026–2027 numbers.
Planning tip: At large public universities, tuition, fees, and housing usually increase modestly each year (often in the 2–5% range). For early budgeting, families may want to plan for roughly $1,000–$1,500 more in-state or $2,000–$3,000 more out-of-state in total direct costs once new rates are published.
St. Olaf uses a “Comprehensive Fee” model. This is the direct, billed cost for a full-time undergraduate student living on campus in Northfield, Minnesota. Because St. Olaf is a private college, the billed price is the same for in-state and out-of-state students.
| Category | In-State | Out-of-State |
|---|---|---|
| Tuition & Fees | $62,700 | $62,700 |
| Housing & Meals | $14,300 | $14,300 |
| Total (Direct/Billed) | $77,000 | $77,000 |
Why only these items? We include the costs you typically pay directly to St. Olaf — tuition, fees, housing, and meals. Other indirect costs (not billed by the college) still matter for budgeting and aid eligibility, including:
- Books & course materials (≈ $1,000)
- Transportation & travel (≈ $600, varies by distance)
- Personal & incidental expenses (≈ $900)
Planning note: $77,000 reflects the most recently published comprehensive fee. Families should expect this number to rise modestly over time (often ~3–5% per year), so use $77,000 as a solid planning baseline for the 2026–2027 cycle unless St. Olaf publishes updated rates.
📉 Average Net Price (What Families Actually Pay)
The average federal net price is approximately $30,154 per year after grants and scholarships (IPEDS).
This reflects what students from all income levels actually paid on average — not the sticker price.
Use the St. Olaf Net Price Calculator
for a personalized estimate, and learn how net price and the Student Aid Index (SAI) work in our
Net Price & SAI Guide.
St. Olaf requires the CSS Profile in addition to the FAFSA for institutional need-based aid (CSS Profile code: 6638). If you only submit the FAFSA, you may still be considered for federal/state aid — but you can miss out on St. Olaf’s institutional grant eligibility.
- Who should file: Any student seeking St. Olaf need-based aid
- Bridge connection: The St. Olaf Bridge can guarantee full tuition for Minnesota families with income of $100,000 or less (with typical assets), and institutional aid eligibility depends on submitting required forms
- Timing: Plan around St. Olaf’s mid-January aid timing (often aligned with January 15)
FAQ — Cost of Attendance at St. Olaf College
Why is there no in-state vs out-of-state tuition difference?
St. Olaf is a private college, so tuition does not depend on residency. All students pay the same comprehensive fee regardless of where they live.
What’s included in the $77,000 billed cost?
St. Olaf’s comprehensive fee covers tuition, mandatory fees, housing (standard/shared room), and a standard meal plan. Premium housing or upgraded room types can cost more.
Does St. Olaf offer a full-ride scholarship?
Not in the traditional “full ride” sense for all students. However, the St. Olaf Bridge can cover full tuition for qualifying Minnesota families (income ≤ $100,000 with typical assets). Indirect costs like books and travel still apply.
How does Early Decision affect cost?
Students admitted through Early Decision are guaranteed a minimum of $30,000 per year in total merit (a combination of academic merit plus campus living support), which can reduce cost even before need-based aid is applied.
Does St. Olaf participate in WUE, ACM, or MSEP?
No. Because St. Olaf is a private college, it does not participate in public regional tuition exchanges. Cost reductions typically come from institutional merit, need-based aid (CSS Profile + FAFSA), and Minnesota-specific programs like the St. Olaf Bridge.
Do faith-based scholarships stack?
Yes. St. Olaf offers Partnership Grants that can provide a 1:1 match for qualifying faith-community scholarships (up to $1,000), and this can stack with other aid sources.
https://wp.stolaf.edu/admissions/afford/
https://wp.stolaf.edu/stuacct/compfee-2/
https://wp.stolaf.edu/financialaid/faq/
https://wp.stolaf.edu/financialaid/how-to-apply-for-financial-aid/
https://bigfuture.collegeboard.org/colleges/st-olaf-college/tuition-and-costs
🧭 Parent Strategy: How to Make St. Olaf Affordable (Without Guessing)
Most sites list scholarships. This section is the “game plan” — the few levers that actually move your bottom-line cost at St. Olaf, and the common mistakes that cost families real money.
✅ The 3 Levers That Move Money at St. Olaf
If St. Olaf is your clear #1, ED can reduce uncertainty because admitted ED students have a minimum $30,000/year total merit commitment (Academic + Campus Living).
- Best for: families who already ran the Net Price Calculator and feel good about the result
- Risk: ED is binding — you lose leverage to compare competing aid offers
The St. Olaf Bridge (MN Tuition Guarantee) can cover full tuition for Minnesota families at or under the income threshold — but “full tuition” is not the same as “full ride.”
- Best for: MN families who submit financial aid forms on time (FAFSA + CSS Profile)
- Reality check: families still need a plan for housing/meals + indirect costs unless merit/need aid covers them
At St. Olaf, students can often combine automatic academic merit with the Campus Living Scholarship (typically $3,000–$4,000) and, for some students, fine arts awards.
- Best for: musicians/artists who will complete the extra audition/portfolio steps
- Key idea: treat auditions like a “money lever” and a placement opportunity, even if your student won’t major in music
📌 What This Can Look Like (Illustrative Examples)
These examples are not guarantees — they’re meant to help families visualize how St. Olaf’s “levers” can interact. Actual awards vary by student and year.
- MN family near Bridge threshold + strong student: Bridge may cover tuition, while merit + Campus Living may help reduce housing/meals. Result: many families focus on whether the remaining gap feels closer to a public in-state option or a “private premium.”
- Out-of-state strong student (test-submit range): Academic merit + Campus Living can reduce the sticker price substantially, but the family should still expect a meaningful remaining cost unless need-based aid is strong.
- Strong student + music/arts applicant: Fine arts awards can be a valuable stacker for students who complete auditions/portfolio requirements on time — often the difference between “nice scholarship” and “this is actually doable.”
⚠️ St. Olaf-Specific Pitfalls to Avoid
- Skipping the CSS Profile: FAFSA alone can limit you to federal/state aid — it may reduce eligibility for St. Olaf institutional need-based aid and programs tied to institutional methodology.
- Missing fine arts steps: music/arts awards usually require extra actions (audition/portfolio). Missing those deadlines can quietly remove a key stacker.
- Assuming “full tuition” = “full ride”: even when tuition is covered, families still need a plan for housing/meals + indirect expenses.
- Going ED without a budget: ED can be smart, but it’s binding — run the Net Price Calculator and decide your walk-away number first.
☎️ Questions to Ask St. Olaf Financial Aid (Fast, Specific, Useful)
- How will the $30,000 ED minimum show up on the award letter (what line items are included)?
- For MN families: how does Bridge interact with academic merit and Campus Living on the final package?
- Is the Campus Living Scholarship automatically included for first-year students living on campus, and what causes it to change?
- For music/arts applicants: what are the audition/portfolio steps and dates, and are awards renewable?
- What are the renewal requirements for merit scholarships (GPA, credits, housing status, etc.)?
✅ Automatic Merit Scholarships at St. Olaf College
St. Olaf awards most academic merit automatically at admission. There is no separate scholarship application for these awards, and students are placed into a tier based on their overall academic profile.
| Scholarship | Award Amount | Eligibility / Criteria | Separate App? | Renewable? | Who Actually Wins? | Deadline |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buntrock Scholarship | Up to $34,000/yr (+$3k–$4k Campus Living) |
~3.9+ GPA*; ACT ~31–33* or SAT ~1420–1500* | No | Yes — 4 years | Top academic admits with exceptional coursework and consistency | Admission deadline (ED / EA / RD) |
| Regents Scholarship | $30,000–$33,000/yr (+$3k–$4k Campus Living) |
~3.8+ GPA*; ACT ~30–32* or SAT ~1380–1480* | No | Yes — 4 years | High-achieving students just below the very top tier | Admission deadline |
| Presidential Scholarship | $26,000–$29,000/yr (+$3k–$4k Campus Living) |
~3.7+ GPA*; ACT ~28–31* or SAT ~1310–1420* | No | Yes — 4 years | Strong academic students within St. Olaf’s core admit pool | Admission deadline |
| Dean’s Scholarship | $23,000–$25,000/yr (+$3k–$4k Campus Living) |
~3.6+ GPA*; ACT ~27–30* or SAT ~1260–1360* | No | Yes — 4 years | Solid academic performers meeting St. Olaf’s academic profile | Admission deadline |
| Faculty Scholarship | $20,000–$22,000/yr (+$3k–$4k Campus Living) |
~3.5+ GPA*; ACT ~25–28* or SAT ~1180–1280* | No | Yes — 4 years | Admitted students near the middle of the academic range | Admission deadline |
| St. Olaf Scholarship (Base Tier) | $17,000–$19,000/yr (+$3k–$4k Campus Living) |
Admitted students meeting baseline academic standards* | No | Yes — 4 years | Most admitted students; ED admits are guaranteed at least $30k total | Admission deadline |
| Campus Living Scholarship | $3,000–$4,000/yr | On-campus residency required | No | Yes — 4 years | Nearly all residential students; stacks with academic merit | With admission |
*GPA/test ranges are estimates based on past recipients and published student profiles; actual thresholds can change by year.
Disclaimer: Award amounts, eligibility ranges, and placement into tiers can change annually depending on funding and the applicant pool. Some institutional awards may replace—not stack with—other aid. Always confirm final award details with St. Olaf’s Office of Financial Aid.
FAQ — Automatic Merit at St. Olaf College
Do I need to apply separately for these scholarships?
No. Academic merit scholarships at St. Olaf are awarded automatically based on your admission application.
How does Early Decision affect merit?
Students admitted through Early Decision are guaranteed a minimum of $30,000 per year in total merit (academic + campus living), even if placed in the base merit tier.
Does test-optional hurt scholarship chances?
Not necessarily. St. Olaf is test-optional, but students with strong ACT/SAT scores who submit them often receive higher merit placement, especially because the school superscores.
Can merit scholarships stack with need-based aid?
Yes. Academic merit can stack with need-based grants, including programs like the St. Olaf Bridge and CSS Profile–based institutional aid.
Are these scholarships available to transfer students?
Transfer students are considered separately and can receive merit awards ranging from approximately $5,000–$35,000 per year, based on prior college performance.
https://wp.stolaf.edu/financialaid/academic-scholarships/
https://wp.stolaf.edu/financialaid/merit-scholarships/
https://wp.stolaf.edu/admissions/apply/faqs/
🏆 Flagship (Competitive) Scholarships at St. Olaf College
St. Olaf’s scholarship model is intentionally different from many private colleges. Rather than offering a large, branded full-ride or fellows program, St. Olaf concentrates most funding into automatic academic merit and need-based guarantees. As a result, there are very few true “flagship” competitive awards.
| Scholarship | Award Amount | Eligibility / Criteria | Separate App? | Renewable? | Who Actually Wins? | Deadline |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| St. Olaf National Merit Scholarship | $2,000 per year | National Merit Finalist who names St. Olaf College as their first-choice institution | Yes — via National Merit | Yes — up to 4 years | A small number of National Merit Finalists who formally designate St. Olaf as their sponsoring college | National Merit deadlines |
- Automatic academic merit (often $21,000–$38,000 per year)
- Early Decision merit guarantees
- Need-based aid through the St. Olaf Bridge
- Departmental and participation-based awards (covered next)
FAQ — Flagship Scholarships at St. Olaf
Why is there only one scholarship listed here?
Because St. Olaf does not use large, branded “flagship” awards as its primary aid strategy.
Most students receive the bulk of their funding through automatic merit and need-based programs instead.
Is the National Merit Scholarship a big part of affordability?
On its own, no. The $2,000 National Merit award is relatively modest, but it can stack with St. Olaf’s academic merit and need-based aid.
Where should families look for additional competitive money?
Departmental and participation-based awards — especially in music and the arts — are covered in the Hidden Gem Scholarships section and often stack on top of academic merit.
https://wp.stolaf.edu/financialaid/national-merit-scholarship-program/
https://wp.stolaf.edu/financialaid/academic-scholarships/
🎖 Honors & Academic Enrichment at St. Olaf College
St. Olaf does not have a traditional Honors College that you apply to with admission. Instead, many high-achieving students find the “honors-equivalent” experience through St. Olaf’s Conversation Programs — interdisciplinary, cohort-style learning communities that are a signature part of the St. Olaf experience.
Conversation Programs are intensive, team-taught learning communities that build a strong academic cohort (and often a shared community experience) around big ideas. Examples include:
- The Great Conversation: a deep interdisciplinary dive into major works of Western history, philosophy, art, and culture.
- American Conversations: explores the cultural, political, and historical formation of the U.S.
- Science Conversation: focuses on scientific discovery and its impact across disciplines and society.
- Asian Conversations: examines major intellectual and cultural traditions across Asia.
These are academic enrichment programs (not scholarships), but they are often the “draw” high-achievers are looking for when a school doesn’t run a formal Honors College.
How Students Earn Honors Recognition at St. Olaf
- Departmental Distinction: Some departments award “Distinction” for students who meet department criteria and complete an advanced capstone experience (often a major project, thesis, or comparable work).
- Departmental Honors / Advanced Capstones: Many majors offer an “honors-level” pathway through seminars, independent research, and senior projects.
National Fellowships, Grad School Prep, and Big Opportunities
For students aiming high (research, grad school, public service, prestigious fellowships), St. Olaf provides structured support through its Nationally Competitive Fellowships advising and the Piper Center for Vocation and Career. These offices help students identify opportunities, meet internal endorsement timelines, and strengthen applications.
- Nationally Competitive Fellowships: guidance for opportunities that may require institutional endorsement (examples include major national scholarships and fellowships).
- Piper Center: career exploration + internship pathways + funding resources for experiential learning (including public service pathways).
Public Works, Civic Engagement, and Real-World Learning
St. Olaf also supports students who want to apply academic work to real community projects through Academic Civic Engagement (ACE) — including community-based learning tied directly to coursework.
FAQ — Honors & Enrichment at St. Olaf
Is there an Honors College application?
No. St. Olaf does not have a separate Honors College admission track. High-achieving students typically pursue enrichment through Conversation Programs, departmental capstones, and faculty mentorship.
Do Conversation Programs come with scholarships?
No. They are academic enrichment programs (not merit scholarships). The “value” is the cohort experience, interdisciplinary coursework, and close faculty engagement.
What does “Distinction” mean at graduation?
“Departmental Distinction” is awarded by certain departments based on department-specific criteria and is typically tied to advanced work (often a substantial project, thesis, or comparable scholarly/creative achievement).
Where should ambitious students go for nationally competitive fellowships?
Start early with St. Olaf’s Nationally Competitive Fellowships advising (especially for opportunities requiring institutional endorsement) and use the Piper Center for internship and funding pathways that strengthen applications.
Is there a real-world “public works” pathway?
Yes. Academic Civic Engagement (ACE) supports community-based learning tied to courses, helping students apply classroom skills to real organizations and projects.
https://wp.stolaf.edu/conversations/
https://catalog.stolaf.edu/academic-regulations-procedures/academic-honors/
https://wp.stolaf.edu/national-fellowship-opportunities/
https://wp.stolaf.edu/pipercenter/
https://wp.stolaf.edu/ace/for-students/
⭐ College Specialty
St. Olaf College is best known as a place where serious academics and a strong sense of purpose intersect. Families are often drawn by its nationally respected music program, but what keeps students thriving is the depth of its liberal arts core — especially in the sciences, mathematics, languages, and religion. St. Olaf consistently attracts students who want intellectual rigor without the pressure-cooker feel of larger research universities, along with close faculty relationships that open doors to graduate school, fellowships, and meaningful careers.
Music (Performance, Composition & Ensembles) — St. Olaf is nationally renowned for its music program, particularly its choral tradition. Students don’t have to be music majors to participate at a high level, and many receive scholarships for ensemble involvement. Alumni are well represented in graduate music programs, professional ensembles, education, and church music leadership.
- Natural Sciences & Mathematics: Known for strong preparation in biology, chemistry, physics, and math, with undergraduate research embedded into the curriculum and excellent outcomes for medical, Ph.D., and other graduate programs.
- Languages & International Studies: A hallmark of the St. Olaf experience, supported by deep language offerings and one of the highest rates of study abroad participation in the nation.
- Religion & Philosophy: Reflecting its Lutheran heritage, St. Olaf is nationally respected for religion and philosophy programs that emphasize ethics, critical thinking, and global perspectives.
- Study Abroad: St. Olaf is consistently recognized as a national leader in undergraduate study abroad, with programs integrated into many majors rather than treated as add-ons.
🔗 Official St. Olaf College Links
Use St. Olaf College’s official university resources below to verify admissions details, scholarship policies, costs, and academic programs. Always rely on these pages for final deadlines, eligibility rules, and award terms.
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Undergraduate Admissions:
Admissions
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Early Decision, Early Action & Application Deadlines:
Apply
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Scholarships & Institutional Financial Aid:
Financial Aid
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Academic & Merit Scholarships Overview:
Academic Scholarships
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Tuition, Fees & Cost of Attendance (Comprehensive Fee):
Comprehensive Fee
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Net Price Calculator:
Net Price Calculator
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Admitted Student Profile / Common Data Set:
https://wp.stolaf.edu/ir-e/college-data/common-data-set/