
Old Westbury, NYpublicwww.oldwestbury.edu/
SUNY Old Westbury is a public liberal arts college on Long Island that punches above its weight in social mobility, offering an accessible education with standout programs in education, environmental science, and theater. With an acceptance rate hovering around 84%, it’s a haven for first-gen and Pell Grant students who benefit from its affordability (64.9% receive grants) and tight-knit, diverse campus culture. Don’t let the modest graduation rate (48%) fool you—its outcomes in teacher certification and value rankings (Money’s #242 'Best Colleges') make it a stealth powerhouse for pragmatic dreamers.
SUNY Old Westbury is decidedly not selective, with Acceptance rateThe share of applicants a college admits in a given year. A 10% acceptance rate means it admits about 1 in 10 applicants. ranging from 83.5% to 92.1% across sources—a deliberate choice to serve its mission of accessibility. The school is Test-optionalA policy where you choose whether to submit SAT or ACT scores. If you don't, the rest of your application carries more weight. (no SAT/ACT required except for specific programs), and admitted students typically have SAT scores between 1010–1210 or ACT scores of 19–25. Applications are due March 15, but the college has actively worked with enrollment data firms like Hanover Research to analyze why admitted students decline offers, aiming to boost YieldThe share of admitted students who actually choose to enroll. Colleges watch it closely, which is why some weigh how interested you seem.. Notably, it’s part of SUNY’s Excelsior Scholarship program, which likely influences its high Pell Grant recipient population.
Old Westbury offers 45 undergraduate majors across four schools, with a 17:1 student-faculty ratio. Its strongest programs include:
The four-year graduation rate is just 32%, but the six-year rate jumps to 48%—reflecting its population of part-time and working students. Microcredentials and certificates add flexibility, and the curriculum leans heavily on SUNY’s liberal arts core requirements.
The campus vibe is commuter-meets-community: while only a fraction live on campus, residential life emphasizes bonding (think shuttle buses decorated with inside jokes, per Instagram reels). As the most diverse SUNY comprehensive college, cross-cultural engagement is baked into programming—clubs range from academic societies to niche interest groups (60+ total). NCAA Division III sports add a low-key competitive edge, but the real glue is affordability-driven camaraderie: students often cite the 'we’re-all-figuring-it-out' ethos. The Office of Student Affairs leans into this with initiatives like FLOW (Financial Literacy at Old Westbury), acknowledging that many students juggle jobs and family obligations.
Old Westbury’s 61% six-year graduation rate (per College Scorecard) outpaces its four-year rate (32%), reflecting its non-traditional student body. It ranks #9 among Top Performers in Social Mobility—unsurprising given that 48% of Pell Grant recipients graduate. Median debt is $14,997, well below the national average, and Money magazine ranked it #242 for ROI, praising its balance of cost and outcomes. Teacher certification pass rates aren’t published, but the Education program’s rigor suggests strong local employment pipelines. Notably, the average time to degree is 4.5 years, likely due to part-time enrollment.
Here’s where Old Westbury shines: 64.9% of students receive grants/scholarships, with an average award of $7,351. The Net priceWhat a family actually pays after grants and scholarships are subtracted from the sticker price — usually far less than the published cost. after aid is $12,329 (vs. SUNY’s $20,077 average), thanks to:
The Net Price Calculator flags hidden costs (e.g., $4,189.50 for books/transportation), but even out-of-pocket expenses are below state averages. For context, the median debt at graduation is less than a used car ($14,997).
Old Westbury is a blue-collar Harvard for strivers: no ivy, no pretension, just relentless focus on lifting students into the middle class. Its social mobility ranking (#9) and Money magazine accolades reflect a rare alchemy of low cost, high support, and pragmatic majors (education, business) that feed directly into Long Island’s job market. The diversity—SUNY’s highest—isn’t just stats; it’s woven into classroom debates and campus events. For students who want small classes (17:1 ratio), professors who know their names, and a degree without crippling debt, it’s a stealth gem. Just bring your hustle—this isn’t a school that hands out trophies for showing up.