Institution Details

Institution Profile

Name
University of Phoenix-Nevada
Address
3755 Breakthrough Way
City
Las Vegas
State
NV, 89135
Website
Phone
(866) 766-0766
Size
1,000 - 4,999
Setting
Suburb: Large
Sector
Private for-profit, 4-year or above
Highest Offering
Master's degree

Location

University of Phoenix-Nevada,3755 Breakthrough Way, Las Vegas, 89135

Admissions

This institution has an open admission policy. Contact the institution for more information.

Costs and Fees At-a-Glance

Application Fee
$0
Graduate Application Fee
$0
Tuition
$9,840
Books & Supplies
$1,120
Room & Board
$0

Submission Requirements Checklist

Requirements not available

Application Information

Application Deadline
Open
Common Application
no
Universal Application
no

Tuition

The table below contains estimates costs for full-time beginning undergraduate students.

Location 2012 - 13 2013 - 14 2014 - 15 2015 - 16
In District $10,560 $10,534 $10,538 $9,840
In State $10,560 $10,534 $10,538 $9,840
Out Of State $10,560 $10,534 $10,538 $9,840
Cost 2012 - 13 2013 - 14 2014 - 15 2015 - 16
Books $760 $760 $760 $1,120
Room & Board $0 $0 $0 $0

Enrollments

In 2015, the enrollment at this institution was comprised of:

Degree Type Part Time Full Time Total
Total 0 1,396 1,396
Graduate 0 265 265
Undergraduate 0 1,131 1,131

Student Body

In 2015, for all enrolled students the ratio of men to women:


In 2015, for all enrolled students the racial breakdown was:


Financial Aid

Below is the average financial aid information for those who were entering postsecondary education for the first time in 2015.

Grant Num Students Pct Students Avg Amount Total
Federal Grant 19 68% $5,242 $99,603
State/Local Grant 0 0% $0 $0
Institution Grant 17 61% $987 $16,787
Loan Aid 27 96% $7,624 $205,840
Total Aid 25 89% $4,656 $116,390

To calculate how much attending this institution might cost you, you can visit the net price calculatoron the institution's website.

Financial aid is only available to those who qualify

Athletics

no athletic data found for this institution