.....
First of all, College is no longer worth it. I'd seriously become an electrician or plumber in the US these days instead. I wouldn't even consider it unless going for a CPA, Engineering degree, STEM, or Medical.
Second, "Major" is a focal area of study. While "technically" it doesn't matter what degree you have in order to get a job, in actuality it VERY much does. It did not used to be this way, and you can thank the rise of the machines for this. Computers will scan your resume and look for "keywords," including relevant areas of study in a college degree. "Have to" have X major degree to get a job? "No." Have far, far, far less of a chance of getting said job without that degree? Yes, very yes.
Moreover, if you study and major in accounting and spend all your time in college learning what debits and credits are along with tax policy, balance sheets, various software programs for accounting, IRS tax codes, and are actively working towards a CPA in undergrad, then that is preparing you for an accounting job..... If you major in English, you could technically still do the job of an accountant assuming you met all the requirements somehow, but who do you think has the better chance of making it a hell of a lot easier upon themselves: the English major or the accounting major, for the accouting position.
Keep in mind, that there is also gray area, such as "related fields." In practice, more and more stupid "smart" technologies that computer review resume' material look ONLY for certain degrees and keywords, but that doesn't mean you can't get the same knowledge majoring in a different area. There's Accounting, Business, Finance, and one of my degrees is in Economics. I took a ton of the same classes the accounting and finance people took along with completing another major in a completely different field of study. I can do a lot of what they do in real life, but getting a computer resume reviewer to recognize that is another story.
The other things that really seems to oddly count more is "experience." Internships and apprenticeships and jobs and things o my. Those look better for what they are asking for these days.
Then of course you're gonna wanna do that horrid "networking" thing, because it is sadly who you know.
As for how to pay for it.... [sigh]. Out of state tuition is a major bear. You're not going to get preference for many things, and you'll be constantly penalized. I wish I had an answer for you. If you're going to college get into STEM and get as much experience and fallback planning as you can manage. Do things that look good on a resume'.