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“You Can. We'll Help.”
Tulsa Community College (TCC) is a public community college serving the Tulsa, Oklahoma metropolitan area and the largest two-year college in Oklahoma. Originally chartered as Tulsa Junior College in 1969 and formally established in 1970, TCC became Tulsa Community College in 1996. The college operates four campuses across the Tulsa area — Metro, Northeast, Southeast, and West — plus online and continuing education programs, serving approximately 30,000 students each year. TCC offers more than 100 degree and certificate programs spanning business, health sciences, information technology, arts and sciences, and workforce development. As an open-access institution, TCC provides affordable pathways to associate degrees and transfer preparation to four-year universities, including the University of Tulsa and Oklahoma State University. The college is deeply embedded in the Tulsa community, partnering with major regional employers such as American Airlines, ONEOK, and Saint Francis Health System to prepare students for high-demand careers. TCC's introduction of its first-ever mascot, Blue the Goose, in 2024 marked a new chapter in building campus identity and community engagement.
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
$8,904
/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): $9,720
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.