The Question Behind the Question

Is grad school worth it financially? That framing is incomplete. A more useful question: Is this specific program, at this cost, in this field, worth it given my career situation?

The same degree type can have wildly different financial outcomes:

  • An MBA from Wharton or Harvard with a Big Tech offer: clearly positive
  • An MBA from a regional school at full tuition with no job at graduation: deeply negative
  • An MS in computer science funded by an employer: almost always positive
  • An MS in creative writing at $60,000/year: almost certainly negative as a pure financial decision

The program and the cost matter far more than the degree type.


The ROI Framework

Calculate the 10-year net financial impact:

(Post-grad annual salary − Without-grad annual salary) × 10 years
minus
(Total cost of tuition + fees + living) + forgone salary during school + debt interest

Example — MBA:

  • Without MBA: currently earning $85,000
  • Expected post-MBA: $140,000 (at a competitive program with recruiting access)
  • Forgone income (2 years): $170,000
  • Tuition + living (2 years): $150,000
  • Total cost: $320,000
  • 10-year premium: ($140,000 − $85,000) × 10 = $550,000

In this example, the MBA has a 10-year net benefit of $230,000 — a strong financial case.

Example — Low-ranked master’s:

  • Without degree: $52,000
  • Post-degree: $62,000 (modest regional premium)
  • Forgone income (2 years): $104,000
  • Tuition (program cost): $80,000
  • Total cost: $184,000
  • 10-year premium: ($62,000 − $52,000) × 10 = $100,000

Net financial impact: −$84,000. This degree is a clear financial loss.


When Grad School Has a Strong Financial Case

Medicine (MD/DO)

The lifetime earnings premium for physicians over non-physicians is substantial — typically $1–3 million in net present value for most specialties. Medical school debt is large ($200,000–$350,000 typical), but specialists in surgery, radiology, cardiology, or anesthesiology typically earn $400,000–$700,000+ annually. Primary care at $240,000–$280,000 still justifies the investment for most borrowers.

Law (JD at Top 25 Schools or on a BigLaw Track)

BigLaw starting salaries (Cravath scale) are $215,000+ for associates at major firms. Tuition at top law schools is $70,000–$80,000/year. For graduates securing BigLaw positions, the investment pays off — though the work is demanding and attrition is high. Regional law schools with $150,000+ in debt and no clear BigLaw path are a far riskier proposition.

Top MBA Programs with Recruiting Access

MBA ROI is highly school-dependent. The programs with clear job placement into consulting, investment banking, and tech (roughly the top 15–20 programs) produce graduates who earn 40–70% premiums over pre-MBA income. Programs outside this tier, at full tuition, have much weaker ROI — often negative.

STEM Master’s With Employer Funding

An employer-sponsored MS in computer science, data science, or engineering while maintaining your salary is usually the best financial education decision available — credentials at near-zero personal cost.


When Grad School Is a Financial Risk

  • Going to get the credential without a specific career plan: degrees pursued to delay the workforce decision or out of uncertainty rarely pay off
  • Low-ranked MBA at full tuition: the network and brand effects that drive MBA ROI are concentrated at the top programs
  • Humanities and social science terminal master’s: average salary premiums are modest; debt loads are not
  • Any program that requires taking on more than 1× your expected first-year post-grad salary in debt without clear job prospects

Questions to Ask Before Enrolling

  1. What is the median salary 3 years out for graduates of this specific program?
  2. What percentage of graduates get the kind of job I want?
  3. What is the total cost of attendance including living expenses?
  4. If I fund this with loans, what will my monthly payment be and how long will I be paying it?
  5. Is there an employer willing to fund this — now or at a future employer?
  6. Is there a required certification or license in my field that mandates this degree?

Related: Should I Change Careers in My 30s? · Is It Too Late to Start Investing? · Should I Pay Off Student Loans or Invest?

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

The content on Wealthvieu is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or investment advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions. Full disclaimer · Editorial policy