Guilford Technical Community College (GTCC) is a public community college located in Jamestown, North Carolina, founded in 1958 as the Guilford Industrial Education Center. One of the largest community colleges in North Carolina, GTCC serves over 35,000 students annually across its main Jamestown campus and additional sites in High Point, Greensboro, and Medford Park. The college offers more than 200 programs of study including associate degrees, diplomas, and certificates in healthcare, business, technology, manufacturing, public safety, and the arts. GTCC draws students from across Guilford County and the surrounding Piedmont Triad region, home to the cities of Greensboro, High Point, and Winston-Salem. The college's Titans athletics program competes in NJCAA Region 10, offering basketball, baseball, softball, and volleyball. GTCC is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges and maintains strong partnerships with regional employers including major manufacturers, healthcare systems, and aviation companies. The college attracts international students from more than 86 countries, reflecting its commitment to global diversity and cultural exchange across its multi-campus system.
Visa, OPT, H-1B alumni outcomes, and acceptance rates by country — sourced from FOIA, USCIS H-1B Hub, and DHS SEVIS.
The deep admissions playbook beyond the headline acceptance rate — round-by-round breakdowns, nationality data, requirements, and contact paths.
Domestic
—
/yr
Out-of-State / Intl
$$7,665
/yr
Beyond the sticker price — every named scholarship, the financial aid policy, need-aware notes, and a personalized net-cost estimate.
How life on campus actually feels — clubs, sports, traditions, housing realities, and how the school integrates with its city.
Where alumni go after graduation — top industries, grad-school continuation, and the qualitative outcomes story.
Sticker price (annual, out-of-state): $7,696
Net-cost estimate is US-resident-only — international applicants are typically excluded from need-based aid at most schools and should treat the sticker price as the planning baseline.