A master’s degree costs $20,000-$120,000. It takes 1-2 years. But does it actually increase your earning potential?
The answer: sometimes yes, often no. Here’s how to tell.
The ROI Formula
ROI = (Salary Increase – Degree Cost) / Degree Cost
Example 1: Online Data Science
- Cost: $20,000
- Starting salary without degree: $70,000
- Starting salary with degree: $95,000
- Increase: $25,000/year
- ROI Year 1: ($25,000 – $20,000) / $20,000 = 25% return
This is excellent. You’ve recovered your investment in the first year.
Example 2: MBA from Average School
- Cost: $60,000
- Starting salary without degree: $75,000
- Starting salary with degree: $85,000
- Increase: $10,000/year
- ROI Year 1: ($10,000 – $60,000) / $60,000 = -83% return
This is poor. You need 6 years to recover the cost.
Master‘s Programs Ranked by ROI
Tier 1: Exceptional ROI (Payback in 12–24 Months)
- Georgia Tech Online Master‘s in Computer Science
- Cost: $10,000-$14,000 (cheapest top-tier program)
- Salary increase: $25,000-$50,000/year
- Payback timeline: 0.3-0.6 years
- Why it wins: Prestige + affordability
- UTAustin Online Master‘s in Data Science
Cost: $10,000-$15,000
- Salary increase: $20,000-$40,000/year
- Payback timeline: 0.4-0.8 years
- Why it wins: Affordable + high demand field
- UC Berkeley Online Data Science
Cost: $20,000-$25,000
- Salary increase: $25,000-$45,000/year
- Payback timeline: 0.6-1 year
- Why it wins: Prestige + strong outcomes
- Stanford Online Computer Science
Cost: $24,000-$30,000
- Salary increase: $25,000-$50,000/year
- Payback timeline: 0.6-1.2 years
- Why it wins: Top prestige + strong outcomes
Tier 2: Good ROI (Payback in 24–36 Months)
- University ofMichigan Data Science
Cost: $20,000-$28,000
- Salary increase: $18,000-$35,000/year
- Payback timeline: 0.8-1.5 years
- Wharton Online MBA
Cost: $85,000-$120,000
- Salary increase: $40,000-$80,000/year (consulting/finance focused)
- Payback timeline: 1.2-3 years (iftargeting high-paying roles)
- University ofTexas Online MBA
Cost: $45,000-$60,000
- Salary increase: $25,000-$50,000/year
- Payback timeline: 1.2-2.4 years
Tier 3: Acceptable ROI (Payback in 36–60 Months)
- Boston University Software Engineering
Cost: $30,000-$45,000
- Salary increase: $15,000-$30,000/year
- Payback timeline: 2-3 years
- Purdue Online Engineering
Cost: $20,000-$35,000
- Salary increase: $15,000-$25,000/year
- Payback timeline: 1.4-2.3 years
Tier 4: Avoid
- Generic MBA from unranked school: Often poor outcomes
- Master’s in non-STEM from unknown school: Weak job market
- Unaccredited programs: Avoid completely
The Decision Matrix
Ask yourselfthese questions:
Question 1: Will this degree increase your salary?
- Yes → Continue evaluating
- No → Skip the degree
Question 2: How much will it increase your salary?
- $25,000+/year → Strong candidate
- $15,000-$25,000/year → Evaluate carefully
- <$15,000/year → Likely not worth it
Question 3: What‘s the cost?
- <$20,000 → Strong option
- $20,000-$50,000 → Evaluate based on salary increase
$50,000 → Only iftarget salary is $120,000+
Question 4: Can employer cover it?
- Yes (50%+) → Pursue immediately
- No → Recalculate ROI with full cost
Question 5: What‘s the job market?
- Growing field (STEM, data, AI) → Better prospects
- Stable field (business, engineering) → Good prospects
- Declining field → Avoid
The Employer Reimbursement Hack
This is the winning strategy most people miss:
- Work for 2–3 years at company with education benefit
- Earn $70,000-$100,000 during those years
- Save 20–30% = $15,000-$30,000 saved
- Employer covers $10,000-$20,000/year for tuition
- Pursue part–time master‘s while working
Result: Degree paid by employer, you have savings, you earned the whole time, your salary jumps immediately after graduation.
This beats going to grad school immediately every time.
The Timeline Decision
Go ImmediatelyAfter Undergrad If:
- Your target career requires it (law school, medical school)
- Program offers recruiting assistance (top MBA programs)
- You’re uncertain about career direction
Work First, Then Grad School If:
- You want to maximize lifetime earnings
- You can get employer reimbursement
- You’re more competitive with work experience
Real Example: The $300K Difference Path A: MBA Immediately
- 2 years in MBA program (no income)
- Cost: $100,000
- Opportunity cost: $150,000 (2 years salary)
- Total cost: $250,000
- Salary after graduation: $120,000/year
- 40-year earnings: $4,800,000
Path B: Work First, Then MBA
- 3 years working: Earn $75,000-$90,000/year (save $20,000/year)
- Total earnings: $270,000
- Savings: $60,000
- MBA cost: $100,000 (employer covers $50,000)
- Your cost: $50,000
- Work 2 years while in part-time MBA
- Salary after graduation: $130,000/year
- 35-year earnings: $4,550,000
Difference: Path A higher lifetime earnings, but Path B has lower out-of-pocket cost and less opportunity cost.
The Bottom Line
Master’s degrees have positive ROI in technical fields (CS, data science, engineering) and prestigious MBA programs. They have marginal to negative ROI in most other fields.
Choose based on:
- Target salary increase
- Program cost
- Job market demand
- Employer reimbursement opportunity
Don’t pursue for prestige alone.