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US News

In addition to once again earning a coveted spot in the Top 100 of U.S. News & World Report’s annual ranking of national liberal arts colleges, Thomas Aquinas College has scored high in the guide’s 2025 edition for a relatively new ranking category: social mobility.

At No. 14, the College is the only Catholic institution to make the top 25 on the magazine’s “social mobility” index, based on how well schools graduate economically disadvantaged students. Although TAC does not provide merit-based scholarships, it maintains a robust financial aid program, reflecting its longstanding commitment to admit and enroll all qualified students, irrespective of financial need. As part of that commitment, the College maintains a vibrant Work-Study Program, which employs students, wherever possible, rather than outside workers, to help make tuition more affordable.

In discussing the rationale for its annual rankings, U.S. News explains that they are based on “17 key measures of academic quality,” ranging from graduation and retention rates to faculty resources and the average federal loan debt of graduates. The College ranks at No. 63 among the nation’s top 211 liberal arts colleges, and number 62 for “Best Value Schools.” The guide further rates Thomas Aquinas College as having the highest possible proportion of classes with under 20 students (100 percent) and the lowest proportion of classes with more than 50 students (0 percent).

“We are pleased, as always, with Thomas Aquinas College’s annual U.S. News rankings, which are evidence that our program of Catholic liberal education is a success by any measure,” says Executive Director of College Relations Chris Weinkopf. “We are especially pleased to see the College ranked so highly on the Social Mobility list, which testifies to the vision of our founders — and the generosity of our benefactors — who were determined, from the very beginning, to make this faithfully Catholic, academically excellent education affordable to anyone with the will and ability to undertake it.”