Degree Dividend
Sourced from federal dataEvery figure datedNo rankings for sale

Allied Health and Medical Assisting Services: degree ROI, salary & best colleges

Bachelor's · CIP 5108 · ~898 graduates/yr · 40 programs

The verdict

Allied Health and Medical Assisting Services graduates earn a median $68,559 four years after finishing — $20,199/yr above the $48,360 high-school baseline. At a typical $16,906/yr net price ($67,624 over four years), that pays back in about 3.3 years. Federal data pools 40 bachelor's programs graduating roughly 898 students a year. (Scorecard field-of-study, 2026 · our math.)

Share

Allied Health and Medical Assisting Services ranks #70 of 202 bachelor's fields by earnings — pays more than 66% of majors.

Pays more than 66% of majors#70 of 202
Lowest-payingHighest-paying
$68,559
Median earnings, 4 yrs out
Scorecard, 2026
$32,919
Median earnings, 1 yr out
Scorecard, 2026
$20,199
Premium over HS baseline
Our math, 2026
3.3 yrs
Payback at median price
Our math, 2026
Colleges with the strongest Allied Health and Medical Assisting Services earnings

College Scorecard field-of-study (2026), program-level median earnings for this CIP · our ranking.

How we compute this. Earnings are the national median for graduates of this field measured 1 and 4 years after completion (Scorecard field-of-study, bachelor's). Premium = 4-year earnings − the $48,360 high-school baseline. Payback = a representative 4-year net cost (median college net price × 4) ÷ premium. Field medians blend every school — a specific program can pay far more or less. Full method on the methodology page; the field ranking is on ROI by major.

Allied Health and Medical Assisting Services: frequently asked questions

Is a Allied Health and Medical Assisting Services degree worth it?
On national medians, yes. Allied Health and Medical Assisting Services graduates earn a median $68,559 four years after finishing — $20,199/yr above the $48,360 high-school baseline — so a typical $67,624 four-year net cost pays back in about 3.3 years.
How much do Allied Health and Medical Assisting Services graduates earn?
A median $68,559 four years after completing the degree, and $32,919 one year out (Scorecard field-of-study, bachelor's). That pools 40 programs and roughly 898 graduates a year.
What is the payback on a Allied Health and Medical Assisting Services degree?
About 3.3 years at a typical $16,906/yr net price — we divide the $67,624 four-year cost by the $20,199/yr earnings premium over the high-school baseline.
Which colleges are best for a Allied Health and Medical Assisting Services degree?
By graduate earnings, Wayne State University, Widener University, Middle Georgia State University lead among the programs we track. The full ranked list is above, each linked to its ROI profile.