Highest-Earning Construction Colleges
The highest-earning Construction colleges, ranked by graduate salary outcomes 10 years after entry. This list highlights where graduates achieve the highest long-term earnings in this field.
By the Numbers
This list focuses on long-term earning potential, showing where graduates achieve the highest financial outcomes.
Of the 20 four-year colleges that offer Construction nationally, these 20 rank highest. Each is scored on the UCD Score, our 0 to 100 measure of outcomes, value, affordability, and selectivity.
What the Data Shows
- UCD Scores run from 79 down to 53, so quality eases off toward the bottom of the list.
- Net prices run from $7,051 to $35,013 a year, so the strongest earners here are not always the most expensive.
High-Earning Construction Colleges: What Stands Out
Among Construction colleges nationwide, Wentworth Institute of Technology posts the highest median earnings at $82,721, $30,494 above the $52,227 average. Public colleges hold 13 of the top 20, an unusually strong showing on earnings. Across the list, median earnings span $25,416 to $82,721, a range that underscores how much institution choice shapes long-term return.
How This Ranking Works
Every college here is ranked by its UCD Score, a 0 to 100 figure that blends graduate earnings, value for the net price paid, affordability, and (for four-year colleges) selectivity. Colleges are scored within peer groups, so a low-cost public and a selective private can be compared fairly rather than the most expensive school simply winning.
We only include colleges that actually offer Construction and predominantly award four-year degrees, drawn from federal IPEDS completions and College Scorecard outcomes. The data refreshes with each annual update, so this ranking never goes stale. See how the UCD Score is built →
How to Use This Ranking
Use this to spot the highest-paying Construction colleges, then sanity-check the price. A higher earner is worth it only if the salary bump outweighs the extra net price over a career, so compare earnings against net price here, and use the UCD Score, which already balances the two, as a tie-breaker.
Questions you might still have
Which Construction college has the highest-earning graduates?
Wentworth Institute of Technology tops this list at $82,721 ten years after entry, against a field average of $52,227. Earnings reflect the college, the program, and how far graduates take the field.
Why do Construction earnings differ between colleges?
Earnings vary with the programs a college offers, the industries its graduates enter, regional pay, and how many go on to advanced degrees. The student body and selectivity also play a role, which is why the spread across this list is wide.
Is a higher-earning college worth the higher cost?
It depends on the price gap. A college earns its premium when the bump in earnings outweighs the extra net price over a career. Compare each college's earnings against its net price here, and use the UCD Score as a tie-breaker.
Does prestige or salary matter more for Construction?
Salary is measurable; prestige is not. These rankings use real earnings 10 years out rather than reputation, so a less famous college that pays off well can outrank a big name. Follow the outcomes, not the brand.
How much does it cost to study Construction?
Four-year Construction colleges average $18,369 a year in net price after aid, and the lowest on this ranking is $7,051. Net price varies with family income, so check each college's calculator for your situation.
How many four-year colleges offer Construction?
20 four-year colleges offer Construction nationally. This page ranks the top 20; browse the rest in the college directory.
Do Construction graduates earn well?
Graduates of four-year Construction colleges earn a median of $52,227 ten years after entry, with the highest on this list at $82,721 (Wentworth Institute of Technology).
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