How to Afford Private School in North Dakota (2026)
Financial aid, ESA programs, 529 plans, and scholarships — every path to reduce what you pay
Private school in North Dakota averages $6,850/year. 27% of students receive financial aid averaging 48% off tuition — bringing the real cost to roughly $3,600/year for qualifying families. Here are every lever available to North Dakota families.
Need-Based Financial Aid
School-based need-based aid is the largest source of private school financial assistance. About 27% of private school students in North Dakota receive need-based grants, with awards covering an average of 48% of tuition.
Avg tuition
$6,850
per year
Avg aid award
$3,300
covers 48% of tuition
Net cost with aid
$3,600
for qualifying families
Apply at the same time as admissions
Most North Dakota schools require financial aid applications in January or February, concurrent with admission. Applying late means getting less, even if you qualify for more — aid budgets fill on a rolling basis.
Use FACTS or SSS to apply to multiple schools at once
Most private schools use FACTS (factsmgt.com) or School and Student Services (SSS) to manage aid applications. One application typically covers multiple schools, reducing your paperwork.
Ask about the school's endowment
Schools with larger endowments can cover more. At well-endowed schools, families earning under $75,000 sometimes receive 60–80% aid coverage. Ask the admissions office directly: "What percentage of students like mine receive aid, and what is the average award?"
Source: NCES and school financial aid surveys. Aid rates vary significantly by school; these are state-level estimates.
North Dakota State ESA & Scholarship Program
North Dakota does not have a universal ESA or voucher program
As of 2026, North Dakota does not offer a statewide ESA or voucher program. Financial aid must come from schools, private foundations, and scholarship tax credit programs.
If you have a student with special needs, check with the school district — federal IDEA funding and some state IEP programs can support private placement costs.
529 Plan: Tax-Free Tuition Savings
Since 2018, 529 plans can be used for K–12 private school tuition — up to $10,000/year per student, federal tax-free. Earnings grow tax-free, and qualified withdrawals for tuition are not taxed.
Start early: A $5,000/year contribution growing at 6% for 8 years becomes ~$52,000 — enough to cover 4–5 years of religious school tuition at North Dakota's average.
Use any state's plan: You don't have to use North Dakota's plan. Plans from other states sometimes have lower fees or better investment options.
Rollover to Roth IRA: Since 2024, unused 529 funds can roll into a Roth IRA (up to $35,000 lifetime, 15-year rule), so saving too much is no longer a concern.
Merit Scholarships & External Grants
Merit scholarships don't require financial need — they're awarded for academic achievement, athletics, the arts, or community service. They can stack with need-based aid at many schools.
School-based merit awards
Most private schools offer merit scholarships to attract high-achieving students. Awards typically range from $1,000 to full tuition. Ask the admissions office directly — many schools don't publicize the full range of merit aid available.
Scholarship Granting Organizations (SGOs)
Many states operate SGO programs funded by corporate tax credits. North Dakota businesses donate to qualifying SGOs, which then award tuition grants. Search "North Dakota private school scholarship granting organization" to find local programs.
Religious and community foundations
Catholic dioceses, Jewish federations, and other religious organizations often provide tuition assistance independent of school-based aid. If your family is affiliated with a religious community, ask about scholarship programs through your congregation.
National programs
The Children's Scholarship Fund, Jack Kent Cooke Foundation, and other national programs provide grants for K–12 private education. Most are income-based. Search FASTWEB and Scholarship America for North Dakota-specific awards.
Payment Plans & Tuition Management
Even without additional aid, monthly payment plans make private school tuition cash-flow manageable. Almost all North Dakota private schools offer structured payment options.
2 payments
$3,425
4 payments
$1,713
10 payments
$685
/month
12 payments
$571
/month
FACTS and Smart Tuition are the two dominant tuition management platforms at North Dakota private schools. They handle monthly billing, autopay, and payment plans — typically for a $50–$80/year enrollment fee.
Sibling discounts are offered at roughly 80% of religious schools — typically 10–25% off for each additional child. Ask the admissions office for the specific policy.
Employee discounts: Many schools offer tuition discounts of 50–100% to faculty and staff. If you work in education, this can be a path to private school at near-zero net cost.
Lower-Cost Private School Options in North Dakota
The biggest cost lever that doesn't require aid is school type. North Dakota's independent schools average $13,500/year — but religious schools average $4,800/year, which is $2,050/year less.
Religious / Parish schools
$4,800/yr avgCatholic, Christian, Jewish, and other faith-based schools average significantly less than independent schools in North Dakota. Many are open to non-members. Diocesan aid is often available on top of school-based aid.
Lower tuition percentile schools
$3,500/yr (25th pct)One in four North Dakota private schools charges $3,500/year or less. Smaller, community-focused schools often offer strong academics at a fraction of the flagship price. Don't overlook them.
Part-time enrollment
40–60% of full-time rateSome North Dakota schools offer part-time or hybrid enrollment. Three days a week typically costs 50–60% of full-time tuition. Worth asking during admissions.
Tuition vs. Income in North Dakota
At $6,850/year, private school tuition represents 9.3% of North Dakota's median household income ($73,959/year) — a manageable share. A common guideline is to keep tuition under 10–15% of gross income.
| Tuition threshold | Household income needed |
|---|---|
| 10% of income (comfortable) | $69,000+ |
| 15% of income (manageable) | $46,000+ |
| North Dakota median household income | $73,959 |
Source: ACS 2023. Financial aid, ESA programs, and lower-cost school options can substantially change these numbers.
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