San Antonio, TX · Tyler, TX · Source: IPEDS federal database
| Texas A&M University-San Antonio | The University of Texas at Tyler | |
|---|---|---|
| Acceptance Rate | 92.0% | 91.5% |
| In-State Tuition | $9,548 | $9,920 |
| Out-of-State Tuition | $23,124 | $25,198 |
| Average Net Price | $13,263 | $14,043 |
| Graduation Rate | 29.0% | 47.0% |
GradFax Analysis
Both are competitive to get into. Texas A&M University-San Antonio accepts 92.0% of applicants; The University of Texas at Tyler accepts 91.5%. Tuition is close: $9,548 at Texas A&M University-San Antonio, $9,920 at The University of Texas at Tyler. Texas A&M University-San Antonio graduates 29% of students in 6 years. The University of Texas at Tyler graduates 47%.
Bottom Line
Both are solid options. Get the actual aid estimates from each school and compare them side by side. The averages above won't tell your specific story.
Source: IPEDS — Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System
The University of Texas at Tyler. It accepts 91.5% of applicants, per IPEDS data.
Source: IPEDS
Texas A&M University-San Antonio, on average. After aid, students pay $13,263/year versus $14,043/year. Your number depends on your aid package.
Source: IPEDS
The University of Texas at Tyler: 47% of students finish in 6 years. Texas A&M University-San Antonio is at 29%.
Source: IPEDS
Data from IPEDS (Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System), a federal database maintained by the U.S. Department of Education. Figures represent the most recent available academic year.