<p>I have to agree with Mr. Payne here. The monthly debt service costs associated with the amount of student loans that many law students incur is hardly a workable option. </p>
<p>Even attending a state law school is not necessarily a bargain basement option. In state tuition (and these are all in state costs for tuition alone (not including room, board, books, travel, phone, etc.)) is really not such a great bargain when one must take out loans to cover their costs:</p>
<p>SUNY Buffalo Law - $12,170
UVA Law - $33,500
U Michigan Law - $17,656
U of Iowa Law - $15,270
U of Minnesota Law - $19,000
U of Cal Berkeley Law - $26,893.50 ($25,458 at Davis)
U of New Mexico Law - $10,561
U of Texas Law - $20,632
U of Wyoming Law - $8,491
U of Alabama Law - $11,190</p>
<p>The lowest total estimated cost of attendance (including books, housing, food, etc.) that I found at any of these schools was approximately $25,000 per year (except for Wyoming, which was approximately $22,000 per year, so if you are a Wyoming resident, you may save a few thousand dollars off of average tuition) and the highest was over $50,000 per year. Since most financial aid at law schools comes in the form of loans and not grants, even a student attending a state law school would likely have some hefty student loans to pay off.</p>
<p>I just don’t think that there are any huge bargains in law school tuition, unless you are one of the lucky very few people who receives some kind of partial or full tuition scholarship. Unfortunately, though, no one can really count on receiving such a scholarship since there are so few of them out there.</p>