Community-college tuition in Mississippi

Published in-state tuition for community colleges in Mississippi, ranked highest to lowest. Use this as a quick reference for comparing the published price tag across institutions; for a full picture of what you'll actually pay, see each college's profile and our cost-and-aid guide for Mississippi.

  1. Southeastern Baptist CollegeLaurel, MS$7,425
  2. Jones County Junior CollegeEllisville, MS$4,806
  3. Northeast Mississippi Community CollegeBooneville, MS$4,470
  4. Hinds Community CollegeRaymond, MS$4,250
  5. Mississippi Gulf Coast Community CollegePerkinston, MS$4,250
  6. East Central Community CollegeDecatur, MS$4,160
  7. East Mississippi Community CollegeScooba, MS$4,095
  8. Southwest Mississippi Community CollegeSummit, MS$4,080
  9. Meridian Community CollegeMeridian, MS$4,078
  10. Copiah-Lincoln Community CollegeWesson, MS$4,000
  11. Northwest Mississippi Community CollegeSenatobia, MS$3,740
  12. Holmes Community CollegeGoodman, MS$3,710
  13. Pearl River Community CollegePoplarville, MS$3,700
  14. Mississippi Delta Community CollegeMoorhead, MS$3,540
  15. Itawamba Community CollegeFulton, MS$3,420

How to read this table

The published rate is what the institution charges before financial aid is applied. Mississippi community colleges are funded through a combination of state appropriations, local tax support (in many states), and student tuition; the public colleges on this list are required to publish their tuition schedules and report them annually to the U.S. Department of Education. Private nonprofit and private for-profit two-year colleges in Mississippi report similarly but may not benefit from state subsidy, which is why their tuition rates can be substantially higher.

Tuition alone is the smallest component of a community-college cost decision for most students. The full annual cost of attendance — including required fees, books, supplies, transportation, and (when applicable) room and board — is consistently several times the tuition figure shown here. Federal Pell Grants, state grant programs in Mississippi, and institutional aid typically reduce the out-of-pocket cost dramatically, often to zero for the lowest-income students. Always file the FAFSA before you decide which community college is most affordable for you personally; the answer based on real cost is frequently different from the answer based on sticker price.

If you are not a Mississippi resident, expect a meaningfully higher tuition rate at most public community colleges in the state. Out-of-state tuition is reported on each college's full profile.