At 40, going back to school requires colder financial analysis than at 22. The 25-year payback window is real, and it strongly supports short, high-ROI credentials. It’s more skeptical of expensive, low-demand programs. Here’s how to run the numbers.
The Direct Answer: Depends on the Program — But Often Yes
At 40, you have about 25 working years before standard retirement age. That’s enough to recover the cost of the right educational investment — but not forgiving enough for expensive, low-ROI programs.
The golden question: Does the annual salary increase × 25 years significantly exceed total program cost?
The 40-Year-Old ROI Framework
| Program | Total Cost | Annual Salary Gain | 25-Year Gain | Net Gain |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trade cert (2 years) | $8,000-$18,000 | +$15,000-$30,000 | +$375K-$750K | Strong YES |
| Nursing ADN (2 years) | $10,000-$25,000 | +$20,000-$35,000 | +$500K-$875K | Strong YES |
| Coding bootcamp (6 mo) | $10,000-$20,000 | +$25,000-$50,000 | +$625K-$1.25M | YES |
| Accelerated BSN (16-24 mo) | $25,000-$55,000 | +$22,000-$40,000 | +$550K-$1M | Strong YES |
| MBA (top-30 school) | $70,000-$120,000 | +$25,000-$50,000 | +$625K-$1.25M | Maybe YES |
| MBA (mid-tier school) | $40,000-$70,000 | +$5,000-$18,000 | +$125K-$450K | Weak |
| MS liberal arts ($60K) | $50,000-$90,000 | +$2,000-$8,000 | +$50K-$200K | NO |
| JD (law degree) | $80,000-$200,000 | Variable | Variable | Risky |
Rule of thumb at 40: The annual salary premium × 25 should be at least 5x the total program cost to justify a major educational investment.
What “Strong ROI” Looks Like at 40
Nursing (ADN, then RN-BSN)
- 2-year community college ADN: $8,000-$18,000
- Salary jump: $32,000/year → $65,000+/year = +$33,000/year
- 25-year gain: $825,000
- Break-even: Under 1 year
- Verdict: Excellent choice at 40
Electrician / Skilled Trade Apprenticeship
- Apprenticeship programs: Low or no cost, often paid while learning
- Salary jump from entry labor to journeyman: +$25,000-$40,000/year
- 25-year gain: $625,000-$1,000,000
- Break-even: Near zero — apprentices earn while learning
- Verdict: Exceptional ROI at 40
Cybersecurity (CompTIA Security+, CISSP, cloud certs)
- Cost: $2,000-$8,000 total
- Salary jump: $45,000 → $75,000-$95,000 = +$30,000-$50,000/year
- 25-year gain: $750,000-$1,250,000
- Break-even: Weeks
- Verdict: One of the best ROI credentials available at any age
The Lost Income Factor is Bigger at 40
At 40, you’re likely earning $55,000-$80,000+ per year. A full-time 2-year program has a hidden cost:
| Your Current Salary | 2-Year Lost Income |
|---|---|
| $55,000/year | $110,000 |
| $70,000/year | $140,000 |
| $85,000/year | $170,000 |
Adding tuition to lost income makes the true cost of full-time programs dramatically higher. Part-time, evening, and online programs that preserve your current salary almost always have better ROI at 40.
Programs Built for Working Adults at 40
| Program | Good Options | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| RN to BSN (already a nurse) | WGU, ASU Online, Penn State Online | 12-18 months part-time |
| Evening/online MBA | Indiana Kelley, UT Dallas, ASU Carey | 24-36 months part-time |
| BS Computer Science | WGU, Georgia Tech OMSCS ($7,000 total MS) | 2-3 years online |
| Accounting (CPA track) | State university evening programs | 2-4 years part-time |
| Trade apprenticeship | Union apprenticeships, local trade programs | 3-5 years, with paid work |
| Data analytics / cybersecurity | Google Career Certs, CompTIA, ISC2 | 6-18 months |
Employer Tuition Reimbursement — Critical at 40
At 40, leverage employer benefits before paying out of pocket:
- ~52% of US employers offer tuition reimbursement
- IRS allows $5,250/year tax-free from employer
- Many employers offer more for job-related programs
- A 3-year part-time program can receive up to $15,750+ in employer funding
Questions to Answer Before You Enroll
- Is this credential actually required for roles you’re targeting? Or is experience + portfolio sufficient?
- What do actual alumni of this specific program earn after 3 years? Not the field average — this program’s alumni.
- Can you complete this part-time while keeping your income?
- What does your employer currently reimburse?
- Is there a $3,000 certification that accomplishes 80% of what a $50,000 degree would?
The Bottom Line
Going back to school at 40 can absolutely be worth it — for the right programs. The analysis is simple: choose credentials that produce a large, durable salary increase, keep the total cost low, and preserve your current income by going part-time if possible. Nursing, tech certifications, trades, and accounting hit all three criteria. Expensive graduate programs in low-demand fields typically don’t. At 40, the math is your guide — not the calendar.
Related: Is It Too Late to Go Back to School at 30? | Is It Too Late to Change Careers at 40? | How Much Should I Make at 40?