The standard MBA debate is unproductive. "It depends" without the actual math is useless. So here is the math.
We ran the ROI calculation across all 33 programs in our database using real tuition figures, official post-MBA salary data from each school's employment report, and per-industry salary breakdowns (consulting, finance, tech, healthcare) from 31 schools. The answer to "is an MBA worth it" varies enormously — not just by school, but by who you are before you start.
Short answer: For a career switcher entering consulting or finance at a top-15 program, an MBA produces 250–400%+ ROI over five years. For someone already earning $150K who stays in the same industry at a mid-tier program, it can be negative. The spread between best and worst case is $400,000 in net lifetime outcome. The details matter.
The Real Cost: What You Actually Spend
Most ROI analysis understates the cost. Tuition is the visible number. Total cost of attendance is not.
| Program Tier | Annual Tuition | 2-Yr Tuition | Living Costs (2yr) | Opportunity Cost | Total Real Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M7 (Wharton example) | $84,830 | $169,660 | $40,000 | $200,000 | ~$410,000 |
| T10 (Tuck example) | $79,800 | $159,600 | $38,000 | $200,000 | ~$398,000 |
| T15 (Ross example) | $74,400 | $148,800 | $34,000 | $200,000 | ~$383,000 |
| T20 (McCombs example) | $56,034 | $112,068 | $32,000 | $200,000 | ~$344,000 |
Opportunity cost — what you would have earned over two years without the MBA — is the number most people ignore. At a $100K pre-MBA salary, you give up $200,000 in income. At $150K, you give up $300,000. That changes the denominator of every ROI calculation.
For this article's comparisons, we use tuition-only ROI (the way programs publish it) and flag where the opportunity cost shifts the analysis. You can model both scenarios in the ROI Calculator.
When an MBA Is Worth It: Career Switchers
The MBA is a credential for people who need to change their professional identity — not just get a promotion. If you are currently in one field and want to enter a dramatically different one, the MBA does something a resume edit cannot: it gives you a legitimate pathway into industries that would otherwise not consider you.
Case 1: Government analyst → Consulting ($65K pre-MBA, Wharton)
This is the prototypical MBA ROI story. Low starting salary, massive post-MBA salary jump, and a school with consulting placement density.
- Pre-MBA salary: $65,000
- Program: Wharton ($84,830/yr tuition)
- Post-MBA salary target: Consulting median at Wharton — $191,000 base + $38,000 signing bonus
- Annual earnings gain: $191,000 − $65,000 = $126,000/yr
- 2-year tuition cost: $169,660
- Tuition-only payback: 1.35 years
- 5-year ROI (tuition-only): 272%
- Fully-loaded payback (including $130K opportunity cost): 2.4 years
At a salary starting point of $65K, even the full-cost calculation produces a sub-3-year payback. This is what career switching looks like when it works.
Case 2: Marketing manager → Finance ($85K pre-MBA, Booth)
- Pre-MBA salary: $85,000
- Program: Chicago Booth ($80,040/yr tuition)
- Post-MBA salary: Finance median at Booth — $175,000 base + $70,000 signing bonus
- Annual earnings gain: $175,000 − $85,000 = $90,000/yr
- 2-year tuition cost: $160,080
- Tuition-only payback: 1.8 years
- 5-year ROI (tuition-only): 181%
The signing bonus here ($70,000) is unusually high — that's real, from Booth's 2024 employment report for finance. Most candidates don't factor signing bonuses into ROI math, but at Wharton and Booth finance, the signing bonus alone is often larger than a year of pre-MBA income.
Per-Industry Salary Data: The Numbers That Drive ROI
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The MBA industry you enter matters more than the school you attend — at least for the first payback calculation. Here is what top programs actually pay, by industry, from official 2024 employment reports:
| Program | Consulting | Finance | Tech | Healthcare |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wharton | $191,000 | $175,000 | $180,000 | $175,000 |
| HBS | $188,000 | $175,000 | $188,000 | $175,000 |
| Stanford GSB | $191,000 | $175,000 | $200,000 | N/A |
| MIT Sloan | $188,000 | $175,000 | $195,000 | N/A |
| Chicago Booth | $186,000 | $175,000 + $70K signing | $183,000 | N/A |
| Haas | $185,000 | $165,000 | $190,000 | N/A |
| Ross | $178,000 | $160,000 | $170,000 | $155,000 |
| Darden | $175,000 | $160,000 | $165,000 | $160,000 |
| Fuqua | $178,000 | $155,000 | $165,000 | $158,000 |
| McCombs | $165,000 | $150,000 | $170,000 | N/A |
Key insight: tech salaries at Stanford GSB and MIT Sloan exceed consulting salaries at most T15 programs. If you're targeting a tech role, a Stanford or Sloan admit changes the comparison set entirely. See the full 31-school breakdown in the ROI Calculator's industry selector — it pulls official employment report data for every school that publishes it.
When an MBA Is NOT Worth It
Already earning above $150K, staying in the same industry
This is the math that breaks most people's assumptions. If you are a senior engineer at $165K joining a tech-track MBA to get a $185K post-MBA tech role at Sloan — that $20K/year salary gain produces a payback of 8+ years on tuition alone. Add two years of forgone $165K income and you are never recovering that capital in a reasonable time horizon.
The MBA creates value by opening doors that are otherwise closed. If the door is already open to you, you're paying $170K for a credential you already have access to implicitly.
Targeting a program outside the top 25 at full price
The salary premium for MBA degrees drops sharply outside the top 25. Median post-MBA salaries in the $130K–$145K range are common at programs ranked 30–50. At $64K/year tuition with a $40K pre-MBA salary, your 5-year ROI might still be positive — but your payback period stretches to 3–4 years on tuition alone, longer with opportunity cost. The case for full-price T30–T50 programs is genuinely weak for most candidates.
Choosing a low-placement program in your target industry
Placement rates in specific industries vary wildly by school. A program that places 8% into consulting versus 28% isn't just a preference difference — it's a question of whether the MBB and Big 4 recruiters show up at all. ROI models assume you actually land the salary. Check industry placement rates by school before running the numbers →
Side-by-Side: Three Scenarios, Same Candidate
Here is the most useful comparison: one career changer ($65K pre-MBA, targeting consulting), three program options with realistic scholarship scenarios.
| Scenario | Program | Net Tuition Cost | Post-MBA Salary | Annual Gain | Payback | 5-Yr ROI |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | Wharton (full price) | $169,660 | $191,000 | $126,000 | 1.35 yrs | 272% |
| B | Ross + $40K/yr scholarship | $68,800 | $178,000 | $113,000 | 0.6 yrs | 721% |
| C | No MBA (current trajectory) | $0 | ~$85,000 at yr 5 | — | — | Baseline |
Scenario B (Ross with scholarship) produces better absolute ROI than Wharton full-price — not because Ross is a better program, but because scholarship structure dominates salary differential at the margin. The $13,000/year salary gap between Wharton and Ross consulting ($191K vs $178K) is trivial compared to the $100,860 tuition gap after the scholarship.
Scenario C is not "free" — if you stay in your current field, your salary at year 5 might be $85K (up from $65K). Against the Ross scenario, you are behind by $93,000 in year 3 alone and compounding the deficit annually.
This is the actual decision. Run your own numbers: Compare any 2–3 programs side-by-side in the ROI Calculator →
The Opportunity Cost Question (Most People Get This Wrong)
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Two years out of the workforce is the cost most MBA applicants underweight. At a $100K salary, you forgo $200,000. At $150K, you forgo $300,000. That is real money that doesn't come back.
The case for absorbing this cost:
- The career switch is the point. If you cannot get into consulting, PE, or the tech company you want without an MBA, you are not just buying a salary bump — you are buying access. That access may not be available at any price without the credential.
- The network compounds. The relationships built during two years in an MBA program accrue career-long value. Co-investors, co-founders, referrals at hiring managers' companies: hard to quantify, consistently underestimated.
- Career acceleration over time often exceeds modeled ROI. We model the first post-MBA role. But the MBA often accelerates career track such that by year 5–7, you are in a VP or partner track role you would not have accessed. That compounding is real.
The case against:
- If you could get the same post-MBA role without the degree (via internal promotion, alternative credential, or direct network), you are paying $200K–$400K fully-loaded for something you could get for free.
- Two years out of the workforce in tech or certain high-growth fields means 2 years of not building product, network, or domain expertise in the field you actually want to be in. The "MBA or not" calculation in tech often flips versus consulting/finance.
How to Actually Answer This for Yourself
The generic answer is not your answer. These are the three inputs that determine whether the math works for you:
- Your pre-MBA salary. The lower it is, the better the MBA math looks. At $65K, almost any top-25 program pays back within 3 years fully-loaded. At $150K, the math gets hard except at the highest-placing programs into the highest-paying industries.
- Your target program and industry. Wharton consulting and Stanford tech are different decisions than Ross healthcare and McCombs general management. Use per-school, per-industry salary data — not median overall salary.
- Your realistic scholarship range. Full-price and scholarship scenarios produce dramatically different ROI. Competitive applicants (above program median on GMAT) at T15 programs frequently receive $20K–$55K/year. That changes the entire calculation.
Model your exact scenario
The ROI Calculator now lets you compare 2–3 programs side by side with your actual pre-MBA salary. Change the industry selector to see per-school salary data from official employment reports. Add a scholarship amount to see how it shifts the payback period. Takes 30 seconds to run.
Compare 2–3 programs with your actual salary →Related Resources
- MBA Salary by School: What Graduates Actually Earn in 2026 — per-school salary data from all 33 programs
- How to Pay for an MBA — scholarship negotiation, loan math, and financing structure
- MBA Scholarships Guide — types, amounts across all 33 programs, named fellowships, and how to negotiate more money
- How to Choose the Right MBA Program — 5-dimension framework for evaluating career goals, geography, culture, ROI, and admission probability
- MBA vs. Master's in Finance — full comparison of both degrees on cost, salary, career paths, and ROI timeline
- Best MBA Programs for Consulting — MBB placement rates, salary data, and which T15 schools break into McKinsey
- Best MBA Programs for Technology — tech placement rates by school, FAANG PM salaries, and the honest answer on whether you need an MBA for tech
- MBA for International Students — H-1B sponsorship rates, STEM OPT, and scholarship parity by program
- Career Outcomes by School — industry placement rates, salary by industry, geographic placement
- Program Comparison Tool — side-by-side on 20+ metrics
- All 33 MBA Programs — full tuition, salary, GMAT, and placement data