Earnings by College Value-Added Test Earnings by Program

Short-Term Certificate Earnings by Program

See what short-term certificate graduates earn 1, 5, and 10 years after they finish, and how much those earnings vary. Pick a program to begin.

For students and families

Short-term certificates can be a fast path to a first job, or a first step toward further education. The data on this page don't tell us which route each graduate took. They show what people actually earned after finishing, one, five, and ten years out, so you can see how the credential tends to pay off over time.

The earnings here come from the U.S. Census Bureau, drawn from payroll and tax records. These are actual earnings, not student surveys (which suffer from response bias and other biases) or web-scraped salary figures (often unverified and duplicated across sites).

How to use this page

Step 1

Pick a broad field

Start with a family of credentials, like Health Sciences, Skilled Trades, Information Technology, or Personal Services.

Step 2

Pick a specific program

Inside that family, choose the exact credential you'd enroll in, like welding, medical assisting, cosmetology, or network support.

Step 3

Pick a state (optional)

Choose where you'd like to study or work to see colleges in that state. Or leave it blank to compare the same program across every state the data covers.

A few questions worth asking

A note on coverage and context. Not every college is in this data. Coverage depends on which states and systems share their records with the U.S. Census Bureau, so a missing school isn't a verdict on quality. Self-employed graduates are also not covered, since their earnings don't run through standard payroll records. That's worth keeping in mind for certificates in the trades, personal services, and other fields where solo work is common. One more thing the data can't show: whether a graduate went on to more schooling after finishing the certificate. Some did, some didn't, and the earnings reflect whatever path each graduate ended up taking.

Select a program group above to begin exploring.

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