Tuition & Financial Aid
Kent is committed to making its education accessible to all families who are drawn to the mission of the School.
Financial aid awards range from $5,000 up to the full cost of tuition, depending upon each family’s individual financial circumstances.
The average financial aid award is nearly $58,300. 32% of Kent students receive financial aid from a school-wide financial aid budget of $9.8 million.
2024-2025 Tuition
Boarding Student Tuition: $78,675
Day Student Tuition: $58,650
Tuition for each academic year is typically published in January or February of the year the academic year begins. (Example: 2025-2026 tuition will be published in January/February 2025.) Tuition covers all academic instruction as well as room and board, but additional fees may apply.
A Transformative Investment
A solid educational foundation is one of the highest priorities for parents/guardians. Investing in the future of one’s child is an important decision. Kent’s objective is to create a learning community that allows families who believe in the School’s approach access to the Kent experience, regardless of their ability to afford it.
Our long-standing commitment to ensuring that student experience is not limited by a family’s ability to pay goes well beyond tuition reduction. Depending on level of need, qualifying families may also receive other forms of assistance besides tuition grants:
- Discretionary spending accounts to help with expenses on and off campus.
- Fee waivers.
- Reduced costs for individual music lessons and school trips.
- Free laundry service.
- Health insurance.
An Elite School; Not A School For Elites
When the Reverend Frederick Herbert Sill founded Kent School in 1906, he envisioned an elite school, not a school for elites. This intention expressed itself in ways big and small, from our motto to the jobs program. Materially, this vision resulted in making the school accessible to those who might not otherwise be able to afford a boarding school education.
An Egalitarian Approach
Fr. Sill was ahead of his time, instituting a tuition model that asked families to pay only what they were able to afford. It is in that spirit that Kent approaches financial aid today. The School provides some form of tuition assistance for 35% of its students, with a goal to endow a 10% increase in financial aid by the Fall of 2026.