Fees
Schedule of Fees 2007-08
Legal residents of the state of
Information concerning the cost of attending CSU Dominguez Hills is available from the Information Center, WH D-245, (310) 243-3696, and includes fees and tuition (where applicable); the estimated costs of books and supplies; estimates of typical student room and board costs and transportation costs; and, if requested, additional costs for specific programs.
Application for Admission to the University
$55 Application fee (non-refundable) payable by check or money order at time application is made. Fee is also applicable for readmission.
$15 Late Application fee
| 0.1 to 6.0 units | 6.1+ units | |
|---|---|---|
| State University Fee | ||
| Undergraduate | $804 | $1386 |
| Graduate | $990 | $1707 |
| Qualified Credential | $993 | $1608 |
| State Activity Fee | ||
| Fall Semester | $70 | $70 |
| Spring Semester | $65 | $65 |
| Student Center fee | $157 | $157 |
| Health Facilities Fee | $3 | $3 |
| Health Services Fee | $70 | $70 |
| Instructionally Related Activities Fee | $5 | $5 |
*NOTE: All fees subject to change based on further action by
the Trustees of the
For summer session fees, please consult summer session Class Schedule.
Nonresident Tuition Fee - These fees are charged in addition to the above registration fees.
$339
$339 Foreign-Visa Students (students who are citizens and residents of a foreign country - per unit or fraction thereof)
The total fee paid per term will be determined by the number of units taken. The maximum nonresident tuition per academic year as of (2007-08) is $10,170.
Fee Waivers
The California Education Code includes provisions for the waiver of mandatory fees as follows:
Section 68120 Children and surviving spouses/registered domestic partners of deceased public law enforcement or fire suppression employees who were California residents and who were killed in the course of law enforcement or fire suppression duties (referred to as Alan Pattee Scholarships);
Section 66025.3 Qualifying children, spouses/registered domestic partners, or unmarried surviving spouses/registered domestic partners of a war period veteran of the U.S. military who is totally service-connected disabled or who died as a result of service-related causes; children of any veteran of the U.S. military who has a service-connected disability, was killed in action, or died of a service-connected disability and meets specified income provisions; any dependents or surviving spouse/registered domestic partner who has not remarried of a member of the California National Guard who in the line of duty and in active service of the state was killed or became permanently disabled or died of a disability as a result of an event while in active service of the state; and undergraduate students who are the recipient of or the child of a recipient of a Congressional Medal of Honor and meet age and income restrictions; and
Section 68121 Students enrolled in an undergraduate program who are the surviving dependent of any individual killed in the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center in New York City, the Pentagon building in Washington, D.C., or the crash of United Airlines Flight 93 in southwestern Pennsylvania, if the student meets the financial need requirements set forth in Section 69432.7 for the Cal Grant A Program and either the surviving dependent or the individual killed in the attacks was a resident of California on September 11, 2001.
Students who may qualify for these benefits should contact the Office of Admissions and Records for further information and/or an eligibility determination.
Older Adult Fee Waiver
Students sixty years of age and older planning to pay fees using the Older Adult Fee Waiver must:
1. obtain an approved fee waiver form from the
2. bring the pink copy to the Office of Admissions and Records; and
3. register on or after the date and time printed on your Registration Access mailer; and
4. take the white and pink copies of the approved form to the Cashier’s Office and make payment no later than the published deadline.
Payment Methods
Fees can be paid by cash, check, money order, Visa, MasterCard or Discover.
Students paying registration fees after published payment due dates will be assessed a late payment fee.
Parking Fees**
$81.00 Four wheeled motorized vehicles (per semester)
$19.50 Two-wheeled
motorized vehicles - includes mopeds
(per semester)
$3.00 Daily permit
$54.00 Summer permit (entire summer)
$32.00 Summer permit (per session)
$8.00 Summer permit (weekly)
** subject to change
Other Fees
Mandatory Fees
varies Course Material Fees (charged for certain courses in art, biology, chemistry, history, English, music, orthotics and prosthetics, and physical education. These courses are footnoted in the Class Schedule in their respective academic course listing)
$15 Diploma Fee
$10 Graduation Date Change Fee
$20 Graduation Fee
$35 Graduation Writing Examination
$5 Identification Card - new and returning students (non-refundable)
Special Test Fees -
a list of test fees is available in the Testing Office
User Fees
$4 Certification of Enrollment and/or Degree
$50 Credential Evaluation Fee
min $4 Duplicate Document or Printout
$10 Emergency Graduation Clearance Processing
$10 Emergency Transcript Processing (less than 10 working days)
$50 International Student Matriculation and Orientation
$33 Resident
Installment Payment Service Charge (non-refundable)
7% Non-resident Installment Plan Service Charge (non-refundable)
$10 Petition for Exception to University Policy
$10 Refund Processing Fee and Service Charge
$5 Revised Evaluation
Transcript (within 10 working days)
$4 Single Transcript
$2 Additional transcripts prepared at the same time up to ten (10) transcripts
$1 Additional transcripts prepared at the same time that exceed the first ten (10) transcripts
Penalty or Deposit Fees
$25 Checks returned for any cause - Per AB1643, ch. 1000, there is a $25 charge on the first returned check and a charge of $35 for each subsequent returned check.
NOTE: If for any reason a check is returned, no personal checks will be accepted for a period of at least two academic semesters.
cost Items lost or broken
$20 Late Payment Fee (per late payment)
Library fines - a list of overdue fines is
posted at the entrance to the library on the 2nd floor of the
Lost books and other Library items - replacement cost + posted service charge
$25 Late Registration (assessed the day instruction begins) (non-refundable)
$10 Petition for Missed Deadlines
Installment Payment of Nonresident Fees
A nonresident student who is a citizen and resident
of a foreign country or of another state within the
The first installment shall be due 30 days from the first date of classes as stated in the Class Schedule.
The second installment shall be due 30 days following the first installment.
The third installment shall be due 30 days after the second installment. A 7% service charge will be added to each installment payment to cover the cost of handling. Any student failing to make timely installment payments may be prevented from paying fees on an installment basis in subsequent semesters.
Nonresident students as defined above shall pay all registration fees required of resident students by the same date as required for resident students.
A State University Fee Installment Plan is available for fall and spring terms. See the Schedule of Classes for information.
Refund of Fees
· Refunds will be automatically processed for students who completely withdraw or make a change of program through the last day of the Add/Drop period.
· Not all fees are refundable.
· $10 is retained by the University to cover processing and the non-refundable portion of the State University Fee.
· Where applicable, the percentage of the refund is determined by the date the “Application for Refund” is received in the Office of Admissions and Records.
· Students whose unit load drops from 6.1 or more units to 6.0 or fewer units may be eligible for a refund of the difference in the State University Fee.
Regulations governing the refund of mandatory fees,
including nonresident tuition, for students enrolling at the
In order to receive a full refund of mandatory fees, including nonresident tuition, a student must cancel registration or drop all courses prior to the first day of instruction for the term. Information on procedures and deadlines for canceling registration and dropping classes is available in the Schedule of Classes.
For state-supported semesters, quarters, and nonstandard terms or courses of four (4) weeks of more, a student who withdraws during the term in accordance with the university’s established procedures will receive a refund of mandatory fees, including nonresident tuition, based on the portion of the term during which the student was enrolled. No student withdrawing after the 60 percent point in the term will be entitled to a refund of any mandatory fees or nonresident tuition.
For state-supported semesters, quarters, and nonstandard terms or courses of less than four (4) weeks, no refunds of mandatory fees and nonresident tuition will be made unless a student cancels registration or drops all classes prior to the first day in accordance with the university’s established procedures and deadlines.
Students will also receive a refund of mandatory fees, including nonresident tuition under the following circumstances:
· The tuition and mandatory fees were assessed or collected in error;
· The course for which the tuition and mandatory fees were assessed or collected was cancelled by the university;
· The university makes a delayed decision that the student was not eligible to enroll in the term for which mandatory fees were assessed and collected and the delayed decision was not due to incomplete or inaccurate information provided by the student; or
· The student was activated for compulsory military service.
Students who are not entitled to a refund as described above may petition the university for a refund demonstrating exceptional circumstances and the chief financial officer of the university or designee may authorize a refund if he or she determines that the fees and tuition were not earned by the university.
Information concerning the refund policies of CSU Dominguez Hills for the return of unearned tuition and fees or other refundable portions of institutional charges can be obtained from the Accounting Office, (310) 243-3802. In addition, any debt owed to the University by an individual student will be subtracted from the refund due.
Parking Fee
Application for refund of parking fees may be made at the Registrar’s Office when requesting a refund of refundable fees or at the Cashier’s Office (see section titled “Refundable Fees"). In either case, the Parking Decal must accompany the request for refund. For requests received before the fifth week of the semester, 75% of the fee will be refunded; from the fifth week up to the ninth week of the semester, 50%; and from the ninth week to the thirteenth week of the semester, 25%.
Fees and Debts Owed to the Institution
Should a student or former student fail to pay a fee or a debt owed to the institution, the institution may “withhold permission to register, to use facilities for which a fee is authorized to be charged, to receive services, materials, food or merchandise or any combination of the above from any person owing a debt” until the debt is paid (see Title 5, California Code of Regulations, Sections 42380 and 42381).
Prospective students who register for courses offered by the university are obligated for the payment of fees associated with registration for those courses. Failure to cancel registration in any course for an academic term prior to the first day of the academic terms gives rise to an obligation to pay student fees including any tuition for the reservation of space in the course.
The institution may withhold permission to register or to receive official transcripts of grades or other services offered by the institution from anyone owing fees or another debt to the institution and place restrictions for the use of any campus services. If a person believes he or she does not owe all or part of an asserted unpaid obligation, that person may contact the Accounting Services Office, (310) 243-3803. The Accounting Services Office, or another office on campus to which the Accounting Services Office may refer the person will review the pertinent information, including information provided by the person and available to the campus and advise the person of its conclusions.
For more information or questions, please contact Colleen Nickles, Senior Director of Financing and Treasury in the CSU Chancellor’s Office, at (562) 981-4579 or cnickles@calstate.edu.
Cancellation of Registration or
Withdrawal from the Institution
Students who find it necessary to cancel their registration or to withdraw from all classes after enrolling for any academic term are required to follow the university’s official withdrawal procedures. Failure to follow formal university procedures may result in an obligation to pay fees as well as the assignment of failing grades in all courses and the need to apply for readmission before being permitted to enroll in another academic term. Information on canceling registration and withdrawal procedures is available from the Registrar’s office.
Students who receive financial aid funds must consult with the Financial Aid office prior to withdrawing from the university regarding any required return or repayment of grant or loan assistance received for that academic term or payment period. If a recipient of student financial aid funds withdraws from the institution during the academic term or a payment period, the amount of grant or loan assistance received may be subject to return and/or repayment provisions.
Average Support Cost per
Full-Time Equivalent Student and Sources of Funds
The total support cost per full-time equivalent student includes the expenditures for current operations, including payments made to students in the form of financial aid, and all fully reimbursed programs contained in state appropriations. The average support cost is determined by dividing the total cost by the number of full-time equivalent students (FTES). The total 2006-07 final budget amounts were $2,788,910,000 from state General Fund appropriations (not including capital outlay funding) $1,016,931,000 from State University Fee (SUF) Revenue, $403,278,000 from other fee revenues, and $184,709,000 from reimbursements for a total of $4,209,119,000. The number of projected 2006-07 full-time equivalent students (FTES) is 348,262. The number of full-time equivalent students is determined by dividing the total academic student load by 15 units per term (the figure used here to define a full-time student’s academic load).
The 2006-07 average support cost per full-time equivalent student based on General Fund appropriation and State University Fee revenue only is $10,928 and when including all sources as indicated below is $12,086. Of this amount, the average student fee support per FTE is $3,551, which includes all fee revenue in the CSU Operating Fund (e.g. State University Fee, nonresident tuition, application fees, miscellaneous course fees).
| Total Amount | Each Student | Percentage | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Support Cost | $4,209,119,000 | $12,086 | 100% |
| •State Appropriation | $2,788,910,000 | $8,008 | 66% |
| •Student Fee Support1 | $1,016,931,000 | $2,920 | 24% |
| •Other Income & Reimbursements2 | $403,278,000 | $1,158 | 10% |
1Student fee support represents campus 2006-07 final budget submitted State University Fee revenue.
2The other income and reimbursements represent campus other fee 2006-07 final budget revenues submitted, as well as reimbursements in the CSU Operating Fund.
The average CSU 2006-07 academic year resident, undergraduate student fees required to apply to, enroll in, or attend the university is $3,199. However, the costs paid by individual students will vary depending on campus, program, and whether a student is part-time, full-time, resident, or nonresident.
Procedure for the Establishment or Abolishment of a Student Body Association Fee
The law governing the
The process to establish and adjust other campus-based mandatory fees requires consideration by the campus fee advisory committee and a student referendum. The campus President may use alternate consultation mechanisms if he/she determines that a referendum is not the best mechanism to achieve appropriate and meaningful consultation. Results of the referendum and the fee committee review are advisory to the campus president. The President may also request the Chancellor to establish the mandatory fee.
For more information or questions, please contact Colleen Nickles, Senior Director of Financing & Treasury in the CSU Chancellor’s Office, at (562) 981-4579 or cnickles@calstate.edu.
