Tuesday, June 18, 2019

What College Grads Expect to Earn Versus What They’ll Actually Earn

What college grads expect to earns versus what they'll actually earn

What college grads expect to earns versus what they'll actually earn

LendEDU, an independent online arena permitting consumers to compare student loans and student loan refinancing options from up to 12 diverse lenders, recently released a study that found that college students are miscalculating what their salary will be right after graduation versus what the reality is.

LendEDU’s survey is based on 7,177 responses to the question: “After graduation, what do you expect your annual salary to be?” This question was asked by College Pulse, an online survey and research platform which concentrates on the college demographic. Data on early career pay (median salary for college graduates with 0-5 years of work experience at close to 1,000 colleges and universities) was obtained from PayScale’s College Salary report.

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The results will certainly be disappointing to most college graduates. The expected median salary for college grads with no experience is $60,000. The actual median salary for employees with 0-5 years of experience is $48,000. This means that people new to the job market will earn approximately 80% of what they expected, and could be even less. The $48,000 figure includes those with up to 5 years of full-time work experience.

Schools where students earn less than they expected

School Actual pay (0-5 yrs. experience) Expected median salary (0 yrs. experience) % Difference
Southern Illinois University, Carbondale $49,100 $70,000 70%
Washington State University $54,600 $70,000 78%
Center Michigan University $47,000 $58,500 80%
University of Louisville $48,000 $60,000 81%
East Carolina University $47,000 $58,000 81%
University of California, Riverside $54,000 $65,000 83%
University of Tennessee, Knoxville $50,200 $60,000 84%
Binghamton University $58,900 $70,000 84%
University of Illinois at Chicago $55,000 $65,000 85%
Temple University $50,800 $60,000 85%

However, not all the news is bad.

Schools where students earn more than they expected

School Actual pay (0-5 yrs. experience) Expected median salary (0 yrs. experience) % Difference
University of Minnesota $55,800 $45,000 124%
Rice University $69,200 $60,000 115%
University of California, Berkeley $68,300 $60,000 114%
Washington University, St, Louis $62,700 $55,500 113%
Syracuse University $56,200 $50,000 112%
University of Pennsylvania $70,100 $62,500 112%
North Carolina State University $55,800 $50,000 112%
Brown University $65,000 $60,000 109%
University of North Carolina $53,500 $50,000 107%
University of Missouri $50,800 $50,000 102%

Recent graduates may be well served by lowering their salary expectations to reduce disappointment and the possibility of turning down what could be their perfect position. By gaining several years of experience to put on their resume and learning how to negotiate, grads will be able to earn their expected salary, and maybe even more.

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Related Resources:

Ivy League and Common Application Tips: How to Get Accepted, a free guide
Sallie Mae: Student Loans with Options and Flexibility, a podcast episode
How Americans Save for College

The post What College Grads Expect to Earn Versus What They’ll Actually Earn appeared first on Accepted Admissions Blog.

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