Decision Day was May 1st and a new cohort of young faces will arrive in August.
Every year in August, somewhere between 11,000 and 13,000 first-year college students show up in Middle Tennessee with their parents, a futon, and a vague sense that this is the place where they’re going to figure out who they are. Some of them came here because their parents went here. Some came because Nashville is having a moment and they wanted in on it. Some came because the financial aid letter made the math work. Some came because Vanderbilt let them in.
Four years later, most of them stay. That sentence cuts against the prevailing narrative of every economic development panel in the South, but the data is clear. The Nashville-Davidson-Murfreesboro-Franklin metro area is one of the most successful regions in the country at retaining and attracting college-educated workers. In 2023, almost twice as many degree holders moved into the metro than left it — a +98% net gain that ranked Nashville second in the entire United States.
Tennessee, as a state, is losing educated residents. The Nashville metro is the reason that loss isn’t worse. We are the gravitational center of an entire state’s educated workforce, and what’s happening here cannot be separated from what’s happening to Memphis, Chattanooga, Knoxville, and every rural Tennessee county whose smartest 18-year-olds get into Vanderbilt and never go home.
That’s a story worth telling, because it changes how you think about who Nashville’s colleges are recruiting and why. So we pulled the numbers. Ten four-year schools across Middle Tennessee. The most recent data each of them publishes about itself. Here’s what we found.
First, A Quick Note on Where the Numbers Come From
Every accredited college in America fills out something called the Common Data Set, or CDS. It’s a standardized form developed jointly by the College Board, Peterson’s, and US News in the 1990s as a way to make college statistics actually comparable across schools. Before the CDS, every college reported its admissions data slightly differently, which meant ranking lists were comparing apples to oranges to whatever Forbes felt like that year.
The CDS fixes that. It’s roughly 30 pages of standardized questions every school answers the same way, posted publicly (sometimes reluctantly) on the school’s institutional research page. It tells you middle 50% test scores, acceptance rates, what percentage of admitted students submitted SATs versus ACTs, how much aid the average student gets, what the four-year and six-year graduation rates are, and — most usefully — a table called C7 where the school rates 19 admission factors as Very Important, Important, Considered, or Not Considered.
That C7 table is where you find out what a school actually values, as opposed to what its marketing department wants you to think it values. A school that rates “character” as Very Important and “test scores” as merely Considered is telling you something different than a school where it’s flipped. Both are honest. They’re just admitting different kinds of kids.
If you want to verify any of what follows, search “[school name] common data set” and you’ll find the source PDF. Most of these are 2024–2025 data, with a couple of 2023–2024 where the newest hadn’t posted yet.
A Word on the Sticker Prices
Every dollar figure in this piece is the published 2024–2025 cost of attendance for a freshman living on campus — that means tuition and required fees, plus room and board, plus the school’s own estimate of books, supplies, and personal expenses. It’s the number a family writes on a calendar before any financial aid is applied. Nobody pays exactly this. Almost everyone gets some discount, and at the most expensive schools, the discounts are the largest. But the sticker price is the comparison that matters when you’re deciding where to apply, because the sticker price tells you what the school thinks it’s worth.
Where in-state and out-of-state tuition differ — meaning the public universities — we use the in-state number for the headline figure, since that’s what most Middle Tennessee applicants actually pay.
The Vanderbilt Question
Start with Vanderbilt because everybody else does. The acceptance rate is 5.9%. The middle 50% SAT is 1510 to 1560. About a third of admitted students have a flat 4.0 unweighted GPA. Six-year graduation rate is 93.5%. Median salary six years after graduation is $73,909.
The published 2024–2025 cost of attendance is $94,142. Tuition and fees alone are $71,226. Room and board run another $23,000-plus. Books, supplies, and personal expenses fill out the rest. That’s the highest published price tag on this list — by a wide margin. The next-most-expensive school doesn’t come within $20,000 of it. Vanderbilt also meets 100% of demonstrated financial need with no loans through Opportunity Vanderbilt, which means the kid from a working-class family graduates with no debt and the kid from a wealthy family pays the full $94,142. About 35% of undergraduates pay the full sticker. The rest are subsidized by an endowment that, per the university’s own vice chancellor for finance, spends approximately $119,000 per undergraduate per year — meaning the school spends more on each kid than it charges them.
Read the C7 table and what stands out is what isn’t at the top. Vanderbilt rates rigor of secondary school record, GPA, class rank, application essay, character and personal qualities, and extracurricular activities all as Very Important. Test scores are only Important. One tier down from where you’d expect, given that the school’s admitted students score in the top fraction of a percent of test-takers nationally.
What that means: at Vanderbilt, the score is the price of admission, not the deciding factor. Everyone in the pool already has the score. The decision happens on the essays, the recommendations, what you’ve actually done outside the classroom, and what kind of person the admissions reader believes you are. The school is choosing characters, not statistics.
The kid who gets in has been groomed for this. They’ve taken AP Biology and AP Calculus and either Latin or Mandarin or both. They’ve started a nonprofit, or they’ve placed in a national competition, or they’ve done research with a university lab the summer after junior year. Their parents are professionals, frequently educators, often have advanced degrees. Eleven percent of the undergraduate class is international.
Here’s the part that surprises people. The Vanderbilt alumni chapter in Nashville is the largest in the world — bigger than New York, bigger than San Francisco, bigger than DC. Vanderbilt sends a meaningful share of its graduates to consulting in New York and tech in California, but the dominant pattern is that they stay. The city has built itself out enough over the last twenty years that the kid who came here from New Jersey at 18 finds reasons to be here at 30. Healthcare. Tech. Music business. Investment banking. The Vanderbilt graduate is now part of why Nashville’s median educated salary keeps climbing.
The Sewanee Bracket
Sewanee — the University of the South — is an hour and a half southeast of Nashville on top of the Cumberland Plateau. Episcopal liberal arts, 1,700 students, the kind of place where the graduation gowns are a tradition that means something. Acceptance rate around 57%. Middle 50% SAT 1230 to 1400, ACT 27 to 32. Test-optional, requires recommendations and an essay. No application fee.
The 2024–2025 published cost of attendance is $74,398. That makes Sewanee the second-most-expensive school on this list — closer to Vanderbilt’s price tier than to anyone else’s. Roughly 96% of Sewanee students receive grants or scholarships averaging about $37,000, and the school commits to meeting 100% of demonstrated need, so the actual paid price is significantly lower than the sticker. But the sticker tells you who Sewanee thinks it’s competing with, and the answer is small Northeastern liberal arts colleges, not regional state schools.
The kid who chooses Sewanee chose against urban college life on purpose — they wanted small, rural, traditional, intellectually serious. A meaningful number end up in graduate school. A meaningful number end up working in Nashville after, because Sewanee is close enough that the alumni network is a Nashville network. That alumni-to-Nashville pipeline is one of the quieter but stronger flows of educated workers into the metro.
The Belmont Trick
Now look at Belmont. The acceptance rate is 95.28%. Almost everyone who applies gets in. By the headline number, this is one of the least selective four-year schools in the region.
Read three more lines of the data and the picture flips. Belmont’s middle 50% SAT is 1180 to 1370. Median is 1260. Median ACT is 27. That’s higher than Lipscomb’s median, higher than MTSU’s median, higher than the median at any other school on this list except Vanderbilt and Sewanee.
How does a school admit 95% of applicants and still enroll students with median scores in the upper end of the regional range? It self-selects. Belmont has spent the last twenty years building a national reputation for music business, entertainment industry, songwriting, and audio engineering programs. The kid who applies to Belmont is rarely a kid casting a wide net. They’re a kid who has decided Belmont is where they want to be, frequently because of a specific program, frequently because they want to be in the music industry and Nashville is where that industry lives.
Total cost of attendance for 2024–2025 is $64,800 — tuition and fees of $42,540, plus roughly $20,760 in room, board, books, and personal expenses. That’s the third-highest sticker on this list, well below Vanderbilt and Sewanee but above every other school in the region. Eighty-three percent of Belmont students receive financial aid averaging about $22,000, but the cost is real, and it’s part of why Belmont graduates leave with more debt than most regional comps. Four-year graduation is 61%, which is strong.
Belmont is the closest thing Nashville has to a city-purpose-built college. The kid comes here for the industry. The industry is right outside the dorm. They graduate, they work in the industry, they stay. Six years out the median salary is $42,770 — modest, because creative-industry careers ramp slowly — but the kids who stay are the ones building the next generation of the music business that the city’s economy depends on. If you cared about the question “is this college producing workers for Nashville,” Belmont would be the most concentrated example you could find.
The Christian Universities
Lipscomb University and Trevecca Nazarene University are both private Christian schools, both around the same size, both with similar acceptance rates in the 67–70% range. They are not interchangeable.
Lipscomb is affiliated with the Churches of Christ, sits in Green Hills, has a middle 50% SAT of 1145 to 1350 and an average GPA of 3.73 — high. They require recommendations and a personal essay, which is unusual at this acceptance rate band. Most schools admitting two-thirds of applicants don’t bother. Lipscomb does, which means they read more than the transcript. Total cost of attendance is $62,296 for 2024–2025 — tuition and fees $40,572, plus another $20,000-plus in room, board, and expenses. Ninety-six percent of students receive grants or scholarships averaging about $24,000.
Trevecca is Nazarene-affiliated, smaller, with a middle 50% SAT of 988 to 1235 and an average GPA of 3.47. Total cost of attendance is approximately $37,000 — closer to a state school sticker than to Lipscomb’s. Tuition and fees are $28,200. Six-year median salary is $46,065 — surprisingly competitive given the smaller program scale. The denominational identity is more pronounced at Trevecca than at Lipscomb. Both schools enroll students for whom faith is a primary part of the college decision, but Trevecca’s pool is smaller and more concentrated in the Nazarene network.
Both schools tend to keep their graduates in the region — partly because Christian university networks are dense in the South, partly because both have built professional schools (Lipscomb’s pharmacy and engineering programs, Trevecca’s nursing and education programs) that feed directly into Tennessee employers. The kid who came to Lipscomb to play music in the city ends up working in healthcare administration in Brentwood. The kid who came to Trevecca to study counseling ends up at a Nazarene-affiliated nonprofit in Antioch. These two schools are quietly responsible for a meaningful share of Nashville’s professional middle class.
Two HBCUs, Two Different Stories
Fisk University was founded in 1866. The oldest university in Nashville. About 1,035 undergraduates. Private, small, selective by HBCU standards — acceptance rates run between 57 and 71% depending on which year you’re looking at. Middle 50% SAT is 1160 to 1480, which is wide because Fisk admits across a real range. The school has been ranked third among HBCUs nationally by Forbes, and it has a graduate bridge partnership with Vanderbilt that can move students from Fisk’s bachelor’s into Vanderbilt’s PhD pipeline.
Total cost of attendance for 2024–2025 is $45,898. Tuition and fees of $25,858 — by far the lowest among the privates on this list — plus about $18,000 in room, board, and other costs. Ninety-six percent of Fisk students receive grants or scholarships, averaging $18,280, but the median federal loan debt at graduation is $27,000, the highest on this list among schools where data is published. Fisk’s tuition is more affordable than its peers, but the financial aid math leaves more loan exposure than the sticker suggests.
Fisk pulls a national applicant pool. The kid who shows up at Fisk has chosen an HBCU deliberately. Often they’re the highest-achieving Black student from their hometown, sometimes they’re a legacy whose grandparents went here, frequently they’re going to graduate school after. Fisk graduates W.E.B. Du Bois, Nikki Giovanni, John Hope Franklin, the Jubilee Singers — that’s not just history, that’s still part of the recruitment pitch. Many Fisk graduates leave for Atlanta, DC, and the cities where Black professional networks have been densest the longest. Some stay, particularly the ones whose graduate work or research careers connect them back to Vanderbilt’s medical and academic complex.
Tennessee State University is something else. Public HBCU in north Nashville, about 8,200 students, acceptance rate 92.6%, middle 50% SAT 856 to 1068, median GPA 3.0. Total cost of attendance for 2024–2025 is $27,177 in-state — tuition and fees just $8,616, plus about $18,000 in room, board, and expenses. That’s among the lowest sticker prices in the region and dramatically lower than Fisk’s, because TSU is a state school. Application deadline is August 1, which is unusually late. Letters of recommendation are not considered. The application reads on transcript and test score.
TSU has been working through years of state political pressure, chronic underfunding, and an audit that found the state had shortchanged the school by an estimated $150 million to $544 million across decades — funding that legally should have gone to its land-grant mission and didn’t. Six-year graduation rate is 33%. Freshman retention is 60%. Those numbers cannot be separated from that history.
The kid who comes to TSU is more likely to be from Memphis or Birmingham or Atlanta than from a wealthy Nashville suburb. They’re more likely to be the first in their family to attend a four-year college. These are the kids colleges should embrace. The ones if given a chance can change the trajectory of their families. The graduates who stay in Nashville become teachers, public sector workers, healthcare workers, nonprofit staff. They are core to the city. Whether the city and state compensates them at parity with their credentials is a question the city has not answered as well as it should have.
The MTSU Reality
Middle Tennessee State University is the biggest school on this list by a wide margin. 18,042 undergraduates. 20,488 total enrollment. Acceptance rate 69%. Median SAT 1130. Median ACT 22. Total cost of attendance for in-state students is $29,482 in 2024–2025 — tuition and fees $10,266, plus about $18,000 in room, board, and other expenses. Out-of-state cost of attendance jumps to $50,790, which is why MTSU’s pool is overwhelmingly Tennessee residents.
The data point that defines MTSU isn’t on the C7 table. It’s the testing breakdown. About 93% of MTSU’s enrolled students submit ACT scores. Six percent submit SAT. Tennessee is ACT country, and MTSU is the most Tennessee-leaning school in the region. The kid who shows up at MTSU is overwhelmingly from a Tennessee high school, usually from Rutherford or Williamson or a county adjacent to those, and the school is structured around that pipeline.
MTSU is the only school on this list that didn’t go test-optional. The application reads on GPA and test score. Essays and recommendations are largely not part of the standard admissions process. That’s not a critique — it’s a function of scale. When you’re processing 14,989 applications and admitting 10,356 of them, you cannot read each one the way Sewanee reads each of its 4,703.
Four-year graduation rate is 36%. Six-year median salary is $39,941. The kid graduating from MTSU overwhelmingly stays in the region. Family is already here. Partner is already here. The job that’s going to hire a recent MTSU graduate is going to be in Nashville or Murfreesboro or Franklin. MTSU is Nashville’s largest single source of homegrown college-educated workforce, and it has been for thirty years.
This matters more than the prestige conversation usually allows. When Nashville talks about its college-educated workforce, the easy story is about Vanderbilt PhDs and Belmont music kids. The boring, unglamorous, demographically dominant story is about MTSU graduates becoming the teachers, accountants, nurses, and project managers the region runs on. They were going to stay regardless. Nashville got lucky that Murfreesboro is close enough to commute.
Cumberland and Austin Peay — The Affordability Tier
Two schools at the bottom of the price tier, with very different approaches to getting there.
Cumberland University in Lebanon is the only test-blind school on this list. They will not look at SAT or ACT scores even if you send them. Acceptance rate 67%. Average GPA 3.3. Total cost of attendance is $44,740 for 2024–2025 — tuition $27,840 plus about $17,000 in living and other expenses. By Cumberland’s own marketing, 97% of students receive financial aid and the average undergrad pays only $2,168 a year out of pocket for tuition and access fees, which makes the published price almost irrelevant to most enrolled students. Six-year median salary is $52,246, which is competitive with much more expensive schools. Four-year graduation is 28%, which is low. Cumberland is the school for the kid whose test scores don’t reflect what they can do, and whose family wants tuition that doesn’t generate ten years of debt.
Austin Peay in Clarksville is the second public university on this list. Acceptance rate 96.4%. Middle 50% SAT 828 to 1108. Average GPA 3.26. Total cost of attendance is $27,344 in-state — the lowest on this list. Tuition and fees of just $9,006, plus about $17,000 in room, board, and other expenses. The school launched a Tuition-Free at Austin Peay program in Fall 2025, which covers tuition and fees for in-state students from households making under $75,000 a year, after other aid is applied. Test-optional, no application fee. Honors Program admits at GPA 3.5+ or ACT 23+. NCLEX nursing pass rate is consistently above 95%. ABET-accredited engineering technology and mechatronics programs aligned with Tennessee’s manufacturing sector.
APSU is what the public university system is supposed to provide: affordable, regional, with strong professional programs that feed directly into local employers. The Tuition-Free initiative is a real piece of policy, and it pulls Austin Peay into a tier that didn’t exist on this list a year ago. For a Tennessee family making under $75,000, APSU’s cost of attendance just got reduced to roughly room and board.
So What Does All This Mean
Ten schools. The cost spread is enormous. Vanderbilt’s published price tag for a freshman this fall is $94,142. Austin Peay’s is $27,344. That’s a $66,798 gap between the most and least expensive schools in the region, for what is nominally the same product: a four-year undergraduate education.
It is not the same product. Vanderbilt is buying a kid four years of access to a national elite, an alumni network that opens doors in any major American city, and a degree that signals something specific to graduate schools and consulting firms. Austin Peay is buying a kid four years of credentialed professional preparation that gets them hired in Tennessee. Both have value. Both have outcomes. The financial aid systems at the top of the price ladder are more generous than anywhere else, which is why Vanderbilt’s median federal loan debt at graduation is $14,000, lower than Fisk’s $27,000 and lower than the published debt loads at every other school on this list except APSU after the new tuition-free program kicks in.
What the schools have in common is that together, they bring something like 11,000 to 13,000 freshmen to Middle Tennessee every fall, from a much wider catchment than most cities this size. Some come from down the road in Smyrna. Some come from New Jersey. Some come from Lagos. They show up in August, they spend four years here, and the data says most of them stay in the metro, and a meaningful number of college graduates from elsewhere move here too.
Nashville should take a victory lap on this. For decades, the conversation about Southern cities was about how they couldn’t keep their best young people, who all left for New York or Chicago or California. That conversation isn’t true here anymore. It hasn’t been true here for a while. The metro grew an educated workforce by 98% net last year. That is a remarkable outcome for any city, let alone one that, fifteen years ago, was widely written off as a regional capital that would always lose its college graduates to bigger places.
The harder question is what that growth costs. Tennessee as a state is bleeding educated workers. The brain drain is real outside the Nashville metro. Memphis, in particular, has been hemorrhaging college graduates for years, and a meaningful share of those graduates have moved here. The same is true at smaller scales for Knoxville, for Chattanooga, and for the rural counties whose smartest kids get into Vanderbilt or Belmont and never come back. Nashville is winning a competition the rest of the state didn’t know it was in.
What Nashville owes those places is a real question, and it is mostly not being asked. We owe Memphis and Knoxville and the rural counties more than the housing market we’ve built and the cost of living that has made it impossible for many Tennesseans from outside the metro to follow their college-educated kids into this city. We owe TSU more than the funding history it’s been handed. We owe MTSU and Austin Peay graduates the kind of wages that keep a college degree from being a financial trap. The retention story is good. The next story is what we do with the workforce we’ve built.
The Common Data Set tells you who’s showing up. The migration data tells you they’re staying. What the city does with that — that’s the part nobody publishes a PDF about.
Sources: Common Data Sets and IPEDS data via the U.S. Department of Education, US News College Compass, and each school’s institutional research and financial aid pages, all reflecting 2024–2025 published cost of attendance for first-year students living on campus. In-state pricing is used for public universities. Migration data from HireAHelper’s 2024 brain drain study based on Census ACS data, and from the South Carolina Department of Employment and Workforce’s 2024 brain drain report. Costs and outcomes shift year to year — these are the most current numbers available as of spring 2026. Send corrections, additions, or your own kid’s college search story to NashvilleBuyLocal@gmail.com.

