Skip to content

King's College vs West Chester University of Pennsylvania

BSN programs compared — side-by-side on NCLEX pass rates, tuition, admissions, and format.

Updated Reviewed by NurseWay Editorial Team

At a glance

Higher NCLEX pass rate
King's College
100% vs 96.0%
Lower tuition
West Chester University of Pennsylvania
$10,687 vs $42,600
Easier to get into
King's College
93.2% vs 79.2% acceptance

Side-by-side details

Best value in each row is highlighted.

King's College
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing.
West Chester University of Pennsylvania
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing.
Program typeBSNBSN
Formatin personin person
LocationWilkes-Barre, PAWest Chester, PA
Length48 months48 months
NCLEX pass rate100%BEST96.0%
Acceptance rate93.2%BEST79.2%
Avg accepted GPA
Min GPA
Entrance examTEAS
Total tuition$42,600$10,687 in / $22,511 outBEST
In-state tuition$42,600$10,687BEST
Out-of-state tuition$42,600$22,511BEST
Clinical placement
AccreditationCCNECCNE

Frequently Asked Questions

Which has a higher NCLEX pass rate, King's College or West Chester University of Pennsylvania?

King's College's BSN program has the higher first-attempt NCLEX pass rate at 100%, compared to 96.0% for the other program. NCLEX pass rates are the single best signal of how well a program prepares students for licensure.

Which is cheaper, King's College or West Chester University of Pennsylvania?

West Chester University of Pennsylvania is the more affordable option at roughly $10,687, compared to $42,600. Factor in residency status, financial aid, and program length when deciding — total cost matters more than annual tuition.

Are King's College and West Chester University of Pennsylvania the same type of program?

Both are BSN programs, so they award the same credential. Compare them on NCLEX pass rate, tuition, length, and location to find the better fit.

How do I decide between King's College and West Chester University of Pennsylvania?

Start by ruling out programs you can't get into (compare your GPA against each school's admissions stats), then weight what matters most — NCLEX pass rate for quality, total tuition for cost, length for time-to-degree, and format (online, hybrid, in-person) for lifestyle. Use NurseWay's free intake to get a personalized fit score for both.

Want a personalized fit score?

Take the free 3-minute intake and we'll rank both programs against your GPA, location preferences, and budget.