Pitt Launches Free Tuition for Pennsylvania Families Earning Under $75,000

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The University of Pittsburgh is rolling out a free-tuition program for in-state students whose families earn $75,000 or less, opening a new path to a four-year degree at four of its regional campuses.

Why it matters: The Pitt Regional Campus Tuition Pledge eliminates tuition charges entirely for eligible Pennsylvania residents — a meaningful expansion of access in a state where regional campus enrollment has been slipping for years and where annual tuition at Pitt's branch campuses runs roughly $14,000 to $15,000 for in-state students.

For example, here is the current cost of attendance at PittBradford:

Pitt Bradford Tuition

The details:

Eligible families: Pennsylvania residents with household Adjusted Gross Income of $75,000 or lessCovered campuses: Pitt-Bradford, Pitt-Greensburg, Pitt-Johnstown, and the Pitt-Titusville nursing programEffective term: Fall 2026Applies to: New first-year students, transfer students, and currently enrolled studentsHow to qualify: File the FAFSA each year — no separate application

How the money works: The pledge is structured as a last-dollar benefit. Pell Grants, Pennsylvania State Grants administered through PHEAA, and any institutional scholarships are applied to tuition first. Pitt then covers whatever tuition balance remains, bringing the tuition line to $0 for every eligible student.

What's not covered: The pledge applies to tuition only. Students still pay for housing, meals, textbooks, and required fees. At Pitt's regional campuses, those non-tuition costs typically run $12,000 to $16,000 a year for students living on campus, meaning families should still expect a real out-of-pocket bill or a need to borrow.

The bigger picture: Pitt joins a growing list of public flagships using last-dollar tuition pledges to compete for in-state students. Penn State has Penn State Promise. Temple offers Temple Promise. The University of Michigan's Go Blue Guarantee covers families up to $125,000. Free-tuition pledges have become a standard tool for boosting yield among middle-income families who don't qualify for full Pell Grants but feel priced out of sticker-price tuition.

How this connects: Tuition-free programs only solve part of the affordability problem. The College Investor's coverage of Pennsylvania financial aid and student loan programs has long flagged that PHEAA State Grants (which max out around $6,000 for the 2026-27 award year) combined with a maximum Pell Grant of $7,395 still leave most students short of the total cost of attendance once room and board are factored in

That gap is why even "tuition-free" students often end up borrowing. Pennsylvania residents pursuing this pledge should still review state-specific aid options and forgiveness programs before signing for student loans.

What to watch: Two things. First, whether Pitt expands the pledge to its main Oakland campus, where tuition is roughly double the regional rate and where the income threshold would need to climb to be meaningful. Second, whether the regional campuses see an enrollment bump for fall 2026, a key signal of whether income-based pledges actually move the needle on access at branch campuses, which have struggled with declining demand across the Northeast.

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Editor: Colin Graves

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