by Dick Hall-Sizemore

The state of Virginia spends more than $100 million annually for Virginia students to attend private colleges and universities in the state.
The program is the Tuition Assistance Grant program, commonly known as TAG, authorized in Sec. 23.1-628 through 23.1-635 of the Code of Virginia. There is no need or merit requirement. The student only needs to be a Virginia resident attending a Virginia accredited, private, nonprofit school. The program is available to undergraduate and graduate students.
The amount available per student is set out in the Appropriation Act. For the current biennium, the basic annual grant is $5,125 the first year and $5,250 the second year. The amount for graduate and medical students is $5,000 for both the first year and second year. Totally on-line students receive half of those amounts; students attending a Historically Black College and University can receive $7,500 annually.
The school that received the most, by far, was Liberty University, with $11.5 million distributed in the fall of 2024. Next was Virginia Union University in Richmond, at $5.7 million, followed by Shenandoah University in Winchester, with $4.2 million. The full list, provided by the State Council of Higher Education for Virginia, which administers the program, can be found here.
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