🎯 Parent/student verdict

Reach

Highly selective reach for nearly every applicant.

✅ Best for

  • Strong academic profile (SAT 1440–1550 · ACT 32–35 middle 50% + avg admit unweighted GPA 3.90 per CDS)
  • Students drawn to Business, Management, & Marketing or Visual & Performing Arts (the two biggest majors)
  • Research-oriented students (R1 — top tier of federal research funding)
  • Strong long-term ROI — median 10-yr earnings of $92,498 against an average net cost of ~$32,740/yr

🎯 The reality

  • Bottom-quartile academic profile if: SAT below 1440, or ACT below 32, or unweighted GPA below 3.70 (admitted-class quartiles per the school's own data)
  • With selective universities, build a balanced college list of Reaches, Targets, and Safeties

Verdict is composed from this college's structured data (admit rate, SAT bands, net price by income, Carnegie classification, scholarship grids) using transparent rule thresholds — not a chat-bot's opinion.

🏛️ Institutional snapshot

What kind of college is this?

Carnegie classification
R1: Doctoral - Very High Research Activity
Total enrollment
20,443
20,000 and above
In-state tuition
$72,097
sticker, before aid
Tuition
$72,097
flat rate (no in/out-of-state split)
Admit rate
10.0%
Highly selective
SAT middle 50%
1440–1550
EBRW + Math composite
ACT middle 50%
32–35
composite
Test policy
Test-optional
2023
10-yr earnings
$92,498
median, after entry

Source: federal IPEDS Admissions 2023 for scores + admit rate; federal College Scorecard (20260606 vintage) for earnings + outcomes. SAT/ACT bands are the 25th–75th percentile of enrolled submitters.

📊 Outcomes & cost

What graduates actually earn, finish, and owe.

Federal College Scorecard data. Earnings are median annual income measured years after entering. Debt is for federal-aid borrowers only (cash-pay students aren't counted).

Earnings, 6 yrs after entry
$74,461
Earnings, 10 yrs after entry
$92,498
4-year completion
92%
Median debt (completers)
$18,000
Cost of attendance
$90,300
sticker price, not net
Pell-eligible students
22%

💰 True ROI

7.1× return

What families actually pay (after aid) vs. the sticker — and how 10-yr earnings stack against the real cost. Most sites quote sticker; we quote what families really pay.

What families actually pay (4 yrs)
$130,960
$32,740/yr avg net
Aid that hides behind the sticker
$230,240
vs sticker $361,200
10-yr earnings total
$924,980
$92,498/yr median, 10 yrs out
Years to recoup actual cost
1.4 yrs
at the median earnings rate

"True ROI" = (10-yr median earnings × 10) ÷ (actual 4-yr net price). The actual net is from Scorecard (average across all families); your family's net price will vary by income — see the breakdown above. Earnings are 10 years after enrollment (Scorecard PP-FOS, all majors combined).

💰 What families actually pay

Net price by family income

Net price = sticker price minus grant aid. This is what families actually pay out-of-pocket after scholarships and need-based aid — the most honest affordability signal there is. At University of Southern California, the average net price is $32,740/yr across all families.

Family income $0-30k
$13,516/yr
Family income $30-48k
$14,394/yr
Family income $48-75k
$19,539/yr
Family income $75-110k
$24,976/yr
Family income $110k+
$56,116/yr

🔎 Earning over $110K? The federal brackets above lump every family from $110K to $1M+ into one row.

Need-based aid usually phases out somewhere between $200K and $300K at private colleges — but the exact threshold varies a lot. For a precise estimate based on your family's actual income, assets, and your student's academic profile, use University of Southern California's official Net Price Calculator:

Get your family's estimate from University of Southern California →

Opens on University of Southern California's site. Takes about 10–15 minutes; have your most recent tax return handy.

Source: College Scorecard (NPT41-NPT45). Net price = total cost of attendance minus federal, state, institutional, and other grants. Some brackets may be suppressed for student-privacy reasons (small cohorts). Title IV first-time, full-time undergraduates only. The $110K+ ceiling is a federal data limitation — Department of Education hasn't refreshed these brackets since the early 2010s.

📚 What students study here

Most popular majors at University of Southern California

Top 5 fields of study by bachelor's degrees awarded (most recent IPEDS Completions). Use this to see what University of Southern California actually graduates — not just what it markets.

1. Business, Management, & Marketing
1,221 degrees · 37.4%
Typical career outcomes
Financial Analyst $100k Management Analyst (Consultant) $99k Marketing Manager $158k Accountant / Auditor $80k
Broad set of corporate roles. Finance + consulting pay top, accounting + HR pay middle, sales spread is wide.
2. Visual & Performing Arts
631 degrees · 19.3%
Typical career outcomes
Graphic Designer $59k Art Director $106k Multimedia Artist / Animator $99k Musician / Singer $39k
Highly variable. Steady-pay roles cluster in design, illustration, production. Performance careers have very wide income distributions.
3. Social Sciences
539 degrees · 16.5%
Typical career outcomes
Economist $118k Political Scientist $130k Sociologist $93k Market Research Analyst $75k
Economics + poli sci sub-disciplines pay much more than sociology + anthropology.
4. Engineering
453 degrees · 13.9%
Typical career outcomes
Mechanical Engineer $100k Electrical Engineer $107k Civil Engineer $93k Chemical Engineer $112k
Engineering majors land high-paying technical roles. Top-earning sub-disciplines: petroleum, chemical, computer engineering.
5. Communication, Journalism, & Related
424 degrees · 13.0%
Typical career outcomes
Public Relations Specialist $67k Marketing Manager $158k Writer / Editor $75k Reporter / Journalist $58k
Media, PR, marketing communications. Salary spread is wide.

Source: IPEDS Completions (C2023_a), bachelor's-level first majors aggregated to 2-digit CIP family. Share is of these top 5 only — not all majors.

💼 Top programs by earnings

Highest-earning majors at University of Southern California

Median earnings 4 years after entry, by major (CIP code). From the federal College Scorecard program-level outcomes.

Major (CIP) Credential Cohort 1-yr earnings 4-yr earnings
Computer Science. Bachelor's Degree 287 $137,284 $192,897
Computer Engineering. Bachelor's Degree 45 $166,369
Real Estate. Bachelor's Degree 41 $98,763 $143,977
Electrical, Electronics, and Communications Engineering. Bachelor's Degree 18 $89,684 $131,532
Aerospace, Aeronautical, and Astronautical/Space Engineering. Bachelor's Degree 49 $78,980 $125,514
Accounting and Related Services. Bachelor's Degree 160 $73,903 $121,101
Computer Software and Media Applications. Bachelor's Degree 32 $103,071 $115,839
Industrial Engineering. Bachelor's Degree 57 $87,807 $112,150
Business Administration, Management and Operations. Bachelor's Degree 832 $71,668 $109,128
Real Estate Development. Bachelor's Degree 100 $49,353 $107,292

For full college-vs-major comparison + ROI leaderboards, see /college-outcomes →

🤖 AI program signal

AI + computing education at University of Southern California

AI degrees (annual)
45
CIP 11.0102
CS degrees (annual)
1543
CIP 11.0701 + 11.0101

Full multi-lens comparison: /ai-colleges →

⚖️ Compare side-by-side

University of Southern California vs. another college

Type the college you want to compare against. We'll show admit rates, net price by your family income, top majors with career outcomes, and merit aid — all in one side-by-side view.

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