🎯 Parent/student verdict

Likely

Accessible for most applicants. Affordable on average — net price runs around $16,200/yr. Major value play for in-state residents.

✅ Best for

  • Solid academic profile (SAT 1180–1398 · ACT 22–29 middle 50% + typically a 3.7+ unweighted GPA in rigorous coursework)
  • In-state residents (tuition ~$9,620 — major value play)
  • Students drawn to Social Sciences or Business, Management, & Marketing (the two biggest majors)
  • Research-oriented students (R1 — top tier of federal research funding)
  • Students who thrive in a large, programmatic environment

🎯 The reality

  • Bottom-quartile academic profile if: SAT below 1180, or ACT below 22, or unweighted GPA below ~3.50 (admitted-class quartiles; GPA floor is a calibrated heuristic where CDS not yet on file)
  • Out-of-state tuition is 3.2× the in-state rate

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
27,264
20,000 and above
In-state tuition
$9,620
sticker, before aid
Out-of-state tuition
$30,860
+$21,240 vs in-state
Admit rate
87.2%
Accepts the majority
SAT middle 50%
1180–1398
EBRW + Math composite
ACT middle 50%
22–29
composite
Test policy
Test-optional
2023
10-yr earnings
$67,170
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
$55,239
Earnings, 10 yrs after entry
$67,170
4-year completion
65%
Median debt (completers)
$19,000
Cost of attendance
$25,557
sticker price, not net
Pell-eligible students
20%

💰 True ROI

10.4× 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)
$64,800
$16,200/yr avg net
Aid that hides behind the sticker
$37,428
vs sticker $102,228
10-yr earnings total
$671,700
$67,170/yr median, 10 yrs out
Years to recoup actual cost
1.0 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 Utah, the average net price is $16,200/yr across all families.

Family income $0-30k
$13,123/yr
Family income $30-48k
$13,424/yr
Family income $48-75k
$14,246/yr
Family income $75-110k
$17,663/yr
Family income $110k+
$21,533/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 Utah's official Net Price Calculator:

Get your family's estimate from University of Utah →

Opens on University of Utah'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 Utah

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

1. Social Sciences
798 degrees · 27.1%
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.
2. Business, Management, & Marketing
714 degrees · 24.2%
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.
3. Computer & Information Sciences
495 degrees · 16.8%
Typical career outcomes
Software Developer $132k Data Scientist $108k Information Security Analyst $120k Web Developer $85k
High-paying tech roles dominate. Median software roles cluster in the $90k-$130k range.
4. Biological & Biomedical Sciences
475 degrees · 16.1%
Typical career outcomes
Biological Scientist $87k Medical & Clinical Lab Tech $61k Pharmaceutical Rep $82k Physician (post-MD) $239k
Many bio majors → med school / grad school. Direct-employment bio roles are lower-paid than that pipeline.
5. Engineering
468 degrees · 15.9%
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.

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 Utah

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 219 $90,282 $137,329
Computer Engineering. Bachelor's Degree 28 $89,605 $114,197
Information Science/Studies. Bachelor's Degree 89 $70,833 $105,127
Finance and Financial Management Services. Bachelor's Degree 175 $68,066 $100,793
Chemical Engineering. Bachelor's Degree 68 $73,841 $98,215
Biomedical/Medical Engineering. Bachelor's Degree 77 $68,783 $96,353
Accounting and Related Services. Bachelor's Degree 112 $60,992 $94,253
Electrical, Electronics, and Communications Engineering. Bachelor's Degree 49 $75,654 $91,361
Mechanical Engineering. Bachelor's Degree 182 $70,999 $91,127
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing. Bachelor's Degree 219 $69,565 $86,243

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

🤖 AI program signal

AI + computing education at University of Utah

CS degrees (annual)
317
CIP 11.0701 + 11.0101

Full multi-lens comparison: /ai-colleges →

⚖️ Compare side-by-side

University of Utah vs. another college

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