Keiser University - Campus Reviews

  • 5 Reviews
  • West Palm Beach (FL) (and 16 others)
  • Annual Tuition: $25,056
0% of 5 students said this degree improved their career prospects
0% of 5 students said they would recommend this program to others
Start Your Online College Search:

Student Reviews - Bachelor's in Psychology

Student Reviews - Bachelor's in Psychology

View reviews of all degrees >>

Write a Review 
Yasmin Rodriguez
  • Reviewed: 3/26/2026
  • Degree: Psychology
"Prospective students and parents should proceed with extreme caution. My experience with this institution has been defined by a lack of transparency, unauthorized enrollment actions, and financial practices that consistently prioritize profit over student success.Parents: be actively involved. Do not allow your student to sign any document without thoroughly reviewing it first. This institution does not provide adequate opportunity to carefully review enrollment paperwork, and critical financial obligations—such as a $100 withdrawal fee—are not clearly disclosed. That fee is later enforced despite the lack of proper notice.Students: be fully informed before signing anything. Ask direct questions, demand written answers, and document everything. You will not be proactively guided on how to minimize costs or accelerate your progress. For example, I repeatedly requested clear guidance on CLEP exams to avoid unnecessary general education courses and reduce expenses. Instead of receiving direct answers, I was deflected for weeks. I ultimately had to take matters into my own hands. CLEP exams are a legitimate and essential tool—use them wherever possible to avoid paying for courses this institution will push you into for financial gain.At no point did I request withdrawal from my program. I explicitly communicated that I wanted to pause enrollment temporarily to complete CLEP exams and return with a structured plan aligned with my goal of advancing into a PhD program. Despite this, I was enrolled in additional courses without my authorization, forcing me to submit a tuition appeal for four classes that I did not consent to take.Academic support is inconsistent and, in many cases, inadequate. Courses rely heavily on third-party paid platforms, requiring additional out-of-pocket expenses for access to materials and assignments. Instructions lack meaningful engagement, and attempts to seek clarification or support are often ignored. This environment does not foster critical thinking or academic growth—it simply cycles students through costly, repetitive tasks.This institution has demonstrated a pattern of disregarding student input, failing to provide essential academic guidance, and enforcing financial penalties without proper disclosure. These practices have directly interfered with my academic timeline and professional goals.I am formally demanding, in writing, that the withdrawal fee be waived, all related collections activity cease immediately, and my academic records be released without further obstruction. This matter must be escalated and resolved without delay.If these issues are not addressed appropriately, I am fully prepared to continue pursuing formal action. This is not a matter of misunderstanding—it is a matter of accountability.Students deserve transparency, respect, and proper academic support. Parents deserve honesty when entrusting an institution with their child’s future. Based on my experience, neither has been consistently provided here."
Jane
  • Reviewed: 4/15/2023
  • Degree: Psychology
"These people want to try to pretend be your friend so they to take your money. The quality of education is horrific and the incompetence of the teachers even more so. If you have to go to Kaiser just take the courses online because literally they're just reusing the online courses for in-person classes which makes no sense. However,, you really should just go to the community college because it's much cheaper and the quality of education is much better compared to this diploma mill."
OMega
  • Reviewed: 12/16/2016
  • Degree: Psychology
"At Keiser you will not be given correct information about the cost of the school. For reference to anyone who questions the cost seeing multiple people on here saying "yes it is expensive but..." let me clarify. 7 months at Keiser cost me over 18,000$ The classes are a month long, if the class moves slow and you do not complete all of the chapter requirements, it doesn't matter. You will simply receive credits for that class, and continue, graduating without proper education or the knowledge necessary for your degree. How great is that?! A minimum of 48,000$ for an associates degree and you don't have an associates level knowledge. I cannot and will not stress enough to anyone considering this route for your education, do not do it. A community college is better equipped, cheaper, and will tell you their cost upfront. This school is awful. I would not wish the financial strain they put on their students to anyone. It is simply not worth it. To pay this much for an education, but you should be getting a quality education for this price, and you're not."
3yearstudent
  • Reviewed: 6/8/2016
  • Degree: Psychology
"This school cost so much money for a degree that doesn't even lisense you! I would not get a psychology degree here let alone any degree here! Please don't waste your time they are very unorganized and it takes weeks to fix any problem you might have."
Math Student
  • Reviewed: 12/12/2015
  • Degree: Psychology
"I find it amusing... Keiser recruited me with the promise of "Personalized education." Now, not even one month in, my math instructor has left me, high and dry, refusing to answer emails and messages, regarding instructions on a math homework assignment.... In the end, I went to the local high school and got better instructions from a high school teacher than I've received from my own instructor.... Also, even though our books REQUIRE us to use calculators to simply help expedite the solving of sub equations, in order to solve the major equations, this instructor has refused to allow us to do so, exposing his weak methodology of teaching. And, to make matters more annoying, he has turned a blind eye to those, who he seems to have personal relationships with, that use their calculators to solve entire problems, creating internal, class tensions.... He is new. However, that seems to only expose a weak hiring criteria, here at Keiser, Orlando..."