<p>First of all, FSU isn’t close to UF in business, not sure where Write On gets his information.</p>
<p>Now, normally this would be a slam dunk for UF, but this is very nuanced. You have to ask yourself: how important is it for you to be with your high school friends? Will you feel left out if you go to UF without them?</p>
<p>even that is difficult, since it’s not hard to make new friends in college. I did it, and so do most people.</p>
<p>I wouldn’t worry so much about which one “feels more like home.” Wherever you go will end up being home, and you’ll have a blast at either school.</p>
<p>It all comes down to how important UF’s better business school is to you, and how important it is for you to stay with your old friends and to help out your family with that extra $10000. We can’t tell you what to do, no matter what the others here may think.</p>
<p>(p.s. If you want to work in the south, don’t fall for the old trick here that people don’t know the difference between the two schools. That’s true in the north, where you won’t get any job offers anyway, but not so in the south. recruiters are very mindful of the strengths of each school here. Honestly, who cares what a Chicago layman thinks about UF and FSU?)</p>
<p>Good luck at FSU or UF. Don’t feel bad about choosing FSU if you go that route. Do what makes sense for you. You can always come back to UF for graduate school.</p>