Community colleges in Missouri

There are 20 two-year, predominantly associate-degree-granting community colleges in Missouri reporting to the U.S. Department of Education. Median published in-state tuition across the state is $5,370 per academic year — among the most affordable postsecondary options anywhere in the country.

This page is a working directory: every institution links to a full profile with cost, enrollment, completion, and transfer numbers. The lists below highlight the most affordable, the largest, and the most transfer-active campuses in Missouri, drawn from the same Department of Education data four-year admissions offices use to evaluate incoming transfer applicants. If you are weighing a community-college start before continuing to a four-year program, the transfer rate column is the single most useful comparison.

Most affordable in-state tuition in Missouri

  1. St Charles Community CollegeCottleville$3,048
  2. Metropolitan Community College-Kansas CityKansas City$3,630
  3. Saint Louis Community CollegeBridgeton$3,660
  4. Moberly Area Community CollegeMoberly$4,110
  5. State Fair Community CollegeSedalia$4,176

Full Missouri cost ranking → Tuition reference →

Largest community colleges in Missouri

  1. Saint Louis Community CollegeBridgeton11,788
  2. Metropolitan Community College-Kansas CityKansas City10,649
  3. Ozarks Technical Community CollegeSpringfield8,165
  4. St Charles Community CollegeCottleville5,017
  5. Moberly Area Community CollegeMoberly3,100

Full enrollment ranking →

Strongest transfer outcomes

Share of full-time entrants who transferred to another institution within 150% of program length.

  1. St Charles Community CollegeCottleville21%
  2. Moberly Area Community CollegeMoberly17%
  3. Metropolitan Community College-Kansas CityKansas City15%
  4. Mineral Area CollegePark Hills15%
  5. East Central CollegeUnion15%

Missouri transfer guide →

All 20 community colleges in Missouri

InstitutionCityEnrollmentIn-state tuition
Bolivar Technical CollegeBolivar144$28,390
Bryan UniversitySpringfield144$15,868
Crowder CollegeNeosho2,570$6,180
East Central CollegeUnion1,639$4,272
Evangel University-James River Assembly of God ChurchOzark89$18,080
Jefferson CollegeHillsboro2,552$5,250
Metropolitan Community College-Kansas CityKansas City10,649$3,630
Mineral Area CollegePark Hills1,592$5,660
Missouri State University-West PlainsWest Plains965$5,936
Moberly Area Community CollegeMoberly3,100$4,110
North Central Missouri CollegeTrenton1,286$5,370
Ozarks Technical Community CollegeSpringfield8,165$4,512
Ranken Technical CollegeSaint Louis1,780$18,008
Saint Louis Community CollegeBridgeton11,788$3,660
Southeast Missouri Hospital College of Nursing and Health SciencesCape Girardeau200$11,064
St Charles Community CollegeCottleville5,017$3,048
St Louis College of Health Careers-FentonFenton399
State Fair Community CollegeSedalia2,694$4,176
State Technical College of MissouriLinn2,123$8,160
Three Rivers CollegePoplar Bluff1,844$4,950

About community college in Missouri

Missouri's 20 community colleges serve as the primary on-ramp into postsecondary education for hundreds of thousands of residents each year. They award associate degrees, occupational certificates, and — through articulation agreements with public and private four-year institutions — transferable general-education credit. For most students, the financial argument is decisive: published in-state tuition averages a small fraction of state-flagship sticker price, and many community-college students qualify for the full federal Pell Grant, eliminating tuition entirely.

If you intend to transfer, the most important question to ask any Missouri community college is which four-year institutions accept its credit on a course-for-course basis. The state's strongest transfer pipelines tend to feed regional public universities, but well-prepared students from accredited community colleges in Missouri routinely transfer into selective private institutions as well. Use the transfer-rate column above as a starting filter, then consult the receiving university's transfer admissions office to confirm specific course equivalencies.

Career-focused students should pay attention to the local labor market as much as to the institution. Missouri's community colleges concentrate heavily in health-care occupations, mechanical and engineering technology, business administration, and skilled-trades programs aligned to regional employers. The Bureau of Labor Statistics' state-level wage data is the right reference for setting expectations on starting salary by field. Where this site reports earnings, the figure is median earnings ten years after first enrollment, drawn from the College Scorecard's match against federal tax records.