We research all brands listed and may earn a fee from our partners. Research and financial considerations may influence how brands are displayed. Not all brands are included. Learn more.

Here's Why Food Is So Insanely Expensive at College

- Portland Press Herald/Getty Images
Portland Press Herald/Getty Images

If you’re wondering why college costs so much these days, take a look at the main dining hall at Wellesley College. The $65 million Lulu Chow Wang Campus Center features floor-to-ceiling windows through which students can admire Lake Waban while enjoying made-to-order omelets for breakfast, Niman Ranch ham sandwiches for lunch, dinner entrees featuring local seafood, and, for dessert, all-you-can eat ice cream.

Wellesley, in Wellesley, Mass., requires all undergraduates to buy a contract for the dining hall. The cost: $7,442 per year, or almost $12 per meal. That’s almost three times more than the money spent by the average American cooking at home.

“Sometimes I look at the meal I’m eating and I’m, like, 'I have two eggs and toast. This is not worth $12,'” says Mieke Bovbjerg, a 19-year-old sophomore from Pittsburgh.

Wellesley is an extreme example of a trend that is one of the most surprising contributors to the expense of college: cafeteria costs. The price of a typical college dining hall contract has jumped 47% in the last decade, federal data show. Meanwhile, overall food costs across the nation rose only 26% over the same period, the government says. As a result, undergraduates who buy dining contracts for their college cafeteria today typically spend much more on food than do Americans who eat at home.

Related: Students, feeling nickel-and-dimed, force new scrutiny of college fees

Data on campus dining contracts collected by the U.S. Department of Education show that the average college charged about $4,300 for a 19 meal-per-week contract for the 2015 academic year. Since the typical academic year is made up of two 15-week semesters, that averages out to about $7.50 per meal.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the average single American spends about $4,000 on food for an entire calendar year, while families spend even less per person. The BLS says the average cost of food for Americans living on their own is a little less than $4 a meal—dining out included. That means undergraduates today appear to be forking out about 85% more per day for food on campus than they would likely pay to cook and eat on their own.

University officials and others who’ve studied the issue say there are four main reasons college dining costs are so high:

Another factor may also play into the high prices: lack of competition. At many schools, students—especially freshmen—are required for social integration reasons to live in a dorm, many of which don’t have kitchens, and buy a dining contract. So they can’t choose to cut their food costs by, say, making two eggs and toast for themselves.

Gatanna Andrade, a first-year student at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, for example, is required to live on campus and to buy a $3,892-a-year dining plan, even though she’s not a big fan of the food and the dining halls are so far from her dorm and her classes that she hardly ever eats in them.

“That money could definitely be going somewhere more productive,” Andrade said. “But at this point there’s not a lot I can do about it.”

----------

This story was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, independent news organization focused on inequality and innovation in education. Read more about higher education.

 

Tags