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Tuition and Funding Resources

Students at work in a sculpture studio

Tuition

Tuition for graduate study at AAP varies by discipline and degree. 

Students who receive university assistantships, fellowships, or other forms of aid will generally receive tuition support from Cornell. For those not receiving tuition support from Cornell, the tuition rates below will help with planning and budgeting. Most students should anticipate annual increases in tuition and fees.

Visit the Graduate School website for additional information.

Tuition rates by degree (Rates are based on the 2025–26 academic year and do not include fees, room and board, books, or personal expenses.):

*All rates are per academic year unless otherwise noted.

  • Ph.D. in History of Architecture and Urban Development: $20,800
  • Master of Architecture (M.Arch.) (Professional): $71,266
  • M.S. in Advanced Architectural Design (Post-professional): $35,633 per semester, $71,266 per academic year (three-semester program total: $106,899)
  • M.S. in Advanced Urban Design (Post-professional): $35,633 per semester, $71,266 per academic year (three-semester program total: $106,899)
  • M.F.A. in Creative Visual Arts: $29,500 
  • M.F.A. in Image Text: $10,180 per semester 
  • Ph.D. in City and Regional Planning : $20,800 
  • Master of Regional Planning (M.R.P): $46,658
  • M.A. in Historic Preservation Planning: $29,500
  • M.S. in Design Technology: $71,266
  • M.S. or Ph.D. in Regional Science: $20,800

For estimates of full costs, please visit the Graduate School website.

Students in graduate degree programs in the departments of architecture and art should plan for expendable supplies costs. These costs can vary depending on academic level, courses selected, and projects chosen.

Funding Opportunities & Resources

College-Wide Funding Opportunities

Cornell Fellowships and Funding

Cornell funding is decided during the application process, but many outside scholarships and fellowships have different application processes and deadlines. The following financial sources are some of the numerous opportunities available that offer additional support from Cornell.

American Association of University Women (AAUW)

The AAUW is the world’s largest source of funding for women’s graduate fellowships.

Clarence S. Stein Awards for Research, Teaching, and Community Service

Each year, the Clarence S. Stein Institute gives monetary awards in each of three categories: research, teaching, and community service. Proposals should be related to the ideas and works of Clarence S. Stein as outlined in his book, Toward New Towns in America. Awards encompass the fields of architecture, landscape architecture, planning, and suburban and urban development. Applications are due in the spring, learn more about the fellowship award opportunities.

Conference Grants (Graduate School)

Full-time, registered students in a graduate research degree program (M.A./M.S., Ph.D.) who are invited to present papers or posters at professional conferences may apply for grants to help cover expenses related to conference participation including travel, lodging, and conference fees. The application deadline is the first day of the month preceding the month during which the conference is scheduled. For example, a conference that starts in April would have a deadline of March 1. Awards are announced two weeks after the deadline. Students who have not received confirmation that their paper has been accepted by the application deadline may apply and provide the appropriate documentation once it becomes available. Applications are available in the Funding and Financial Aid section of the Forms page on the Graduate School website.

Cornell Online Fellowship Notebook

The Cornell Online Fellowship Notebook website contains all of the information that the Graduate Fellowship office has accumulated about outside fellowships.

Fastweb

A free scholarship-searching service, Fastweb offers both domestic and international fellowships.

Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowships

FLAS fellowships support advanced training in foreign languages (excluding certain Western European languages and areas). Applicants do not need to be proficient in the language to apply. Only U.S. citizens and permanent residents are eligible. Awards provide a nine-month stipend and tuition fees. All FLAS fellows receive the balance of tuition from the Graduate School. Ph.D. students who receive FLAS awards also receive a stipend supplement to bring the award to the nine-month assistantship minimum, and individual Cornell Student Health Insurance (SHIP). Applications, usually due in late January, are available from the individual graduate field offices, and fellowships are decided during the spring.

Graduate School Founder’s Fellowship

The Founder’s Excellence Fellowship Portfolio includes recruitment fellowships funded by the Graduate School and SUNY System, and others co-funded by colleges within Cornell and the Graduate School. The fellowships within the Founder’s Excellence Fellowship Portfolio are awarded on a competitive basis to nominated domestic doctoral applicants from all backgrounds applying for Fall admission. Eligible candidates include U.S. citizens, U.S. permanent residents, Indigenous peoples of Canada who qualify as domestic students under the Jay Treaty, or students with DACA status. Nominees must demonstrate excellence in their academics, leadership, and service. They must also demonstrate the potential to contribute meaningfully to Cornell’s founding principle and core values of providing a community of belonging where scholars representing different backgrounds, perspectives, abilities, and experiences can engage in purposeful discovery together in an environment of respect. Visit the Graduate School website for more information.

Institute of International Education (IIE)

The IIE offers scholarships, training, exchange, and leadership programs for international students.

International Research and Exchanges Board (IREX)

IREX administers Muskie graduate fellowships for international students from several Eurasian counties.

International Research Travel Grant

The Mario Einaudi Center and its associated programs sponsor international research travel grants. These grants provide travel support for Cornell University graduate students conducting short-term research and/or fieldwork in countries outside the U.S. Applicants must be enrolled in an approved Ph.D. or master’s degree program at Cornell University. They must also show proof that they have applied for funding from the director of graduate studies in their own fields of study. The application deadline is early February.

NAFSA: Association of International Educators

Visit the NAFSA website, or call NAFSA at (202) 462-4811 to hear a phone recording about financial aid (ask for the recording on financial aid). NAFSA can be reached by mail at 1307 New York Avenue NW, Eighth Floor, Washington, DC 20005; or by phone at (202) 737-3699.

National Science Foundation (NSF)

The NSF offers graduate research fellowships including Women in Engineering and Computer and Information Science awards. Applications for NSF graduate fellowships can also be submitted electronically from their website. Fellowships are for U.S. citizens only.

Research Grants

Full-time registered students in the Graduate School can apply for awards for research-related travel in the U.S. and abroad. These grants are intended for travel during the academic year that is directly related to dissertation research. Priority is given to Ph.D. students who have or will have passed the “A” Exam prior to initiating their travel and to those conducting predissertation research. Travel may be between several weeks to months in duration. Applications are available in the Funding and Financial Aid section of the Forms page on the Graduate School website, and are due in early November.

Student Employment Opportunities

There are a number of employment opportunities throughout the college and university for students ranging in pay per hour; a graduate student may work up to 20 hours per week. Graduate students holding full teaching assistantships may accept a combined total of up to five hours per week of additional assistantship, hourly student appointment, or outside employment if the combination of outside work and assistantships does not exceed 20 hours per week. For students holding one-half (partial) assistantships, the allowance for additional outside employment is increased to 12 hours per week.

Additionally, there are many student employment opportunities at Cornell as well as options specifically for F-1 students.

Architecture Funding Opportunities

Masters Programs (M.Arch./M.S. AAD/M.S. AUD)

Competitive tuition assistance is determined during the admission process for the professional and post-professional programs in Architecture. Outstanding applicants may be considered for additional tuition assistance. All tuition assistance is renewable each year, based on satisfactory academic performance.

In addition to tuition support, there are opportunities for hourly work within the department, the college, and the university for positions that support research, administration, and/or courses. Graduate students can work a max of 20 hours per week and are paid hourly.

Graduate students may also apply for summer thesis research / travel funding offered through the department. These awards are used to support thesis research and travel during the summer immediately before the final thesis semester.

For more information on Graduate funding opportunities, contact Heidi Berrettini, Lead Graduate Programs Associate.

History of Architecture and Urban Development Ph.D. Program

History of Architecture and Urban Development (HAUD) Ph.D. students are offered a package that includes both fellowship and teaching assistantship (TA) support with tuition, stipend, health insurance, and summer stipends. Most students receive fellowship support for their first and fourth years, and TAs for their second and third years.

In addition, students have received TAs outside the department in organizations including the Program in American Studies, the John S. Knight Institute for Writing in the Disciplines, the Judith Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies, and the Department of Science and Technology Studies.

Students are encouraged to apply for outside fellowships for work on their dissertations. In recent years, HAUD students have received support from the Graham Foundation, the U.S. Department of Education’s Foreign Language and Area Studies, the Social Science Research Council, the Kress Foundation, and the Society for the Humanities at Cornell.

Other funding opportunities include residence hall assistantships that typically cover room and board. Limited funds are also available from the Graduate School, various programs in the College of Arts and Sciences, as well as the architecture department to support travel to conferences for students delivering a paper, and to help defray research travel expenses.

For more information on HAUD funding opportunities, contact Heidi Berrettini, Lead Graduate Programs Associate.

Art Funding Opportunities

Competitive Tuition Support and Scholarships

Outstanding applicants to the M.F.A. Creative Visual Arts and M.F.A. in Image Text programs will be considered during the admissions process for scholarships that offer partial tuition assistance. All tuition assistance is renewable each year, based on satisfactory academic performance.

In addition to tuition support, for M.F.A. Creative Visual Arts students there are opportunities for hourly work within the department, the college, and the university for positions that support research, administration, and/or courses. Graduate students can work a max of 20 hours per week and are paid hourly.

City and Regional Planning Funding Opportunities

Tuition Support and Scholarships

Outstanding applicants to Master of Regional Planning (M.R.P.) program will be considered during the admissions process for scholarships that offer partial tuition assistance. All tuition assistance is renewable each year, based on satisfactory academic performance.

Hourly Work

There are opportunities for hourly work within the department for positions that support either research, administration, or courses. M.R.P. students can work 5-15  hours per week and are paid hourly. Ph.D. students may accept up to five hours of hourly work.

Atkinson-Tetreault Fellowship

This fellowship is awarded jointly by the department and the Telluride Association, a campus and national organization. The award includes room and board at Telluride House, plus a stipend of $7,500 with a partial tuition award (from CRP) for two years of residency in the M.R.P. program. The fellowship is offered in alternate years and is available for 2027-28. Students that are accepted into the M.R.P. program  receive an application in February, which is due in March. The fellowship is awarded in April.

Paul D. Coverdell Fellows/USA Program: Peace Corps Partnership

Paul D. Coverdell Fellows/USA offers all returning Peace Corps Coverdell Fellows a minimum award of 33% of the total value of tuition and fees. The awarded amount will be divided between a tuition reduction grant and a work stipend to help cover living expenses. Amounts vary by year. 

Over the summer, participants will receive staff support in identifying and generating diverse summer internships in fields and locations of their choice. These internships typically provide stipends of $3,750 to be awarded on a 50-50 basis, combining Cornell and employer matching funds.

For more information on Paul D. Coverdell Fellows/USA, contact CRP academic programs coordinator at crpinfo@cornell.edu, or visit the Peace Corps website.

Summer Funding

All students who receive financial support (assistantship, fellowship, travel awards, etc.) must register for the summer at no charge. This includes participants in the cooperative internship and Urban Scholars programs. Summer registration usually starts during the last week of the spring semester and students may register online.

Departmental Travel and Research Grants

Graduate students who wish to attend a conference (i.e., ACSP, APA, PN, etc.) or receive research travel funding, can apply for conference travel funding from the department. Prior to attending, the student must complete a Student Financial Commitment form indicating the conference and the estimated budget for expenses. If approved for funding, upon return to campus, the student can then complete a Payment/Reimbursement Form with receipts for reimbursement of a portion of the total expenses to the City and Regional Planning Office, 106 West Sibley Hall. Limited funds for research travel may also be available.

CRP Professional Opportunity Program

All first-year Master’s of Regional Planning and Master’s of Historic Preservation Planning students are eligible to receive a stipend for securing a summer internship, project, or opportunity related to their career goals. AAP Career Development works with the cohort throughout the academic year to set goals and activate networking and search strategies, and in the summer of 2025, over 70 students took advantage of the program and stipend.

AAP Career Development shares opportunities from a variety of industries and employers, and students participate in a wide spectrum of public, private, local, state, federal, and international internships and opportunities. Students have access and work with AAP Career Development on their search, application materials, interview prep, and to support any questions they might have through the process. Students who confirm a professional opportunity or internship with the AAP Career Development team receive a stipend from CRP the first week of June to support their summer. If you have any questions about the CRP Professional Opportunity Program, please reach out to AAP Director of Career Development Sam Carney at sac387@cornell.edu.