<p>Are there any elite or really good schools that have a low application fee? ($30 or less preferably?) Thanks so much!</p>
<p>Colby College = $0 application fee
Union College = $0 application fee</p>
<p>I’m sure there are many others.</p>
<p>But really, you’re going to base your decision on which colleges to apply on the size of the application fee? If you can’t afford the application fee, ask for a fee waiver.</p>
<p>BUMP … I want to know this too … good colleges with very low application fees?</p>
<p>This is only because I would like to see which colleges I can get in to w/o wasting money</p>
<p>I strongly suggest not applying to school because they don’t have application fees; however, I will say that Case Western Reserve is a very good school with no application fee.</p>
<p>This is only because I would like to see which colleges I can get in to w/o wasting money</p>
<p>Instead of wasting money, you’ll be wasting time… yours and that of whoever has to read your applications.</p>
<p>Drexel and Clarkson don’t have fees if you use the Common App.</p>
<p>OK, maybe I will be the only one to say this, but your post is SAD. Applying to colleges should be about what schools “fit” you … what schools you feel you could attend and would be happy at. By simply applying to random schools that don’t have an application fee, and for which you have no idea (nor do you care) that the school would be a good fit for you – you not only waste the time of the admissions dept, but you could possibly be taking away a spot that could have gone to a student who REALLY wanted to attend that school. Please, think about this … take the application process very serious.</p>
<p>I hope your GC and his/her staff would take you aside and punch you. They have to do work for every single school you apply.</p>
<p>You’d be taking THEIR time away from others who really need their attention.</p>
<p>BTW: look up how to correctly use an apostrophe. Hopefully you learn this before you submit your college “essay’s”</p>