Calculator Inputs
Use the fields below to estimate whether a degree creates strong financial value over time. Results appear above this form after submission.
Example data table
| Program | Study years | Net direct cost | Loan principal | PV investment | Expected NPV | ROI | Payback |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bachelor of Data Analytics | 4 | $38,800.00 | $23,280.00 | $75,991.68 | $314,352.10 | 413.67% | Year 7 |
Formula used
Net direct cost = (Annual tuition + Annual other costs − Annual scholarships) × Study years
Opportunity cost each study year = max[(No-degree take-home income) − (Study-time take-home income), 0]
Annual loan payment uses a standard amortization formula based on financed share, interest rate, and repayment term.
Expected premium = Completion probability × (Degree-path take-home income − No-degree path take-home income)
Expected NPV = Present value of future net advantage − Present value of cash study cost − Present value of opportunity cost
ROI = (Expected NPV ÷ Present value of total investment) × 100
How to use this calculator
- Enter the program name and how many years you expect to study.
- Fill in annual tuition, other school costs, and yearly aid.
- Add your current salary without the degree and your expected first salary after graduation.
- Estimate growth rates, employment probabilities, and your completion probability honestly.
- Set the loan share, interest rate, repayment term, and take-home percentage.
- Press the calculate button to view NPV, ROI, payback timing, and projected yearly advantage.
- Use the CSV button for spreadsheet analysis, then use the PDF button above the form for a printable summary.
Frequently asked questions
1. What does degree value mean here?
It means the expected financial payoff of studying compared with continuing your current no-degree career path. The calculator combines direct cost, lost earnings, debt, future income, and completion risk.
2. Why include opportunity cost?
Opportunity cost captures the salary you may give up while studying. Ignoring it can make a program look cheaper than it really is, especially for mid-career learners.
3. What is the expected NPV?
Expected NPV is the present value of future net benefit after subtracting present-value study and opportunity costs. A positive figure suggests the education path adds economic value under your assumptions.
4. How should I estimate salary growth?
Use cautious long-run averages, not best-case hopes. Many people test low, base, and high scenarios to see whether the decision remains strong under weaker salary growth.
5. Why use completion probability?
Not every student finishes on time or at all. Completion probability discounts future benefit so results reflect academic risk rather than assuming a guaranteed successful outcome.
6. Does a high ROI guarantee a good choice?
No. You should also consider stress, career fit, family responsibilities, location flexibility, and the chance that actual job outcomes differ from expected inputs.
7. What does payback year show?
Payback year shows when cumulative post-graduation advantage recovers the out-of-pocket study cost and forgone earnings. Faster payback usually means less financial risk.
8. Should I compare several programs?
Yes. Run the calculator for each option using the same assumptions where possible. Comparing programs side by side often reveals which path creates the best risk-adjusted return.