Inside the first-of-its-kind luxury college campus tour that costs mind-bending $300K for four days

These high schoolers are getting a lesson in luxury. College hopefuls will soon be able to tour universities like rockstars — zipping between campuses on a private jet, crashing in five-star hotels, and wining and dining their way to a decision. For a mind-boggling, all-inclusive $300,000, the college admissions consultancy group IvyWise will whisk away seven students — each with a parent in tow — on an opulent, first-of-its-kind tour of seven elite universities this fall. The four-day jaunt costs about as much as four years of tuiton at an Ivy League college.The maiden “Elevation Experience” begins Oct.13 in the Big Apple, where the families will visit New York and Columbia universities, before the parents enjoy dinner at either Casa Cipriani or Zero Bond.
Students, meanwhile, will be treated to Samoa Sundaes at the celebrity hotspot Corner Store, according to IvyWise’s CEO and founder, Dr.Kat Cohen. But that’s just the beginning.
Attendees will be chauffeured to the Four Seasons in Tribeca, where they’ll stay for a night before boarding a private Gulfstream G650 jet that will whisk them to Princeton University in New Jersey — followed by a skip and a jump to Yale in New Haven, CT.Before the end of Day 2, the jet will arrive in Beantown, where the families will spend the next two nights at another Four Seasons hotel between tours of Boston’s Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University, and dinner at ritzy Deuxave. The trip culminates with a flight to Washington, DC, for a campus tour of Georgetown University – complete with a meal at the esteemed Le Diplomate – before jetting back to Manhattan. Attendees can expect private tarmac pickups and chauffeured luxury cars every step of the way – as well as new bags to transport their belongings, courtesy of a not-yet-decided designer luggage brand that IvyWise will partner with, according to Cohen. As far as academic advice, IvyWise counselor Christine Chu – who prev...