A PhD is the ultimate investment in knowledge — and the ultimate opportunity cost. Whether it’s worth it depends almost entirely on the field and whether you pursue academia or industry.
Quick answer: A PhD is financially worth it in STEM and economics where industry salaries are $120,000-$200,000+. It’s a poor financial investment in humanities and most social sciences where academic jobs are scarce and salaries are low. If you’re doing a PhD purely for money, you’re in the wrong program. If you’re doing it for intellectual passion, understand the financial trade-offs.
PhD True Cost (Opportunity Cost Analysis)
| Cost Component | Funded PhD | Unfunded PhD (rare) |
|---|---|---|
| Tuition | $0 (waived) | $30,000-$50,000/yr |
| Stipend received | +$25,000-$40,000/yr | $0 |
| Duration | 5-7 years | 5-7 years |
| Salary you’d earn without PhD | $68,000-$120,000/yr | $68,000-$120,000/yr |
| Annual opportunity cost | $30,000-$90,000/yr | $100,000-$170,000/yr |
| Total opportunity cost (6 years) | $180,000-$540,000 | $600,000-$1,020,000 |
The “free” PhD still costs $180,000-$540,000 in lost earnings. Never do an unfunded PhD.
PhD ROI by Field
| Field | Time to Degree | Post-PhD Salary (Industry) | Post-PhD Salary (Academia) | 20-Year Net ROI | Worth It? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Computer Science | 5-6 years | $180,000-$300,000+ | $100,000-$150,000 | $2,000,000+ (industry) | Yes (industry) |
| Electrical Engineering | 5-6 years | $150,000-$220,000 | $95,000-$140,000 | $1,200,000 (industry) | Yes |
| Economics | 5-6 years | $150,000-$250,000 | $110,000-$180,000 | $1,500,000+ | Yes |
| Statistics / Biostatistics | 5-6 years | $140,000-$200,000 | $100,000-$150,000 | $1,000,000 | Yes |
| Physics | 6-7 years | $120,000-$180,000 | $85,000-$120,000 | $500,000 (industry) | Depends |
| Chemistry | 5-7 years | $100,000-$150,000 | $75,000-$110,000 | $200,000 | Marginally |
| Biology / Life Sciences | 6-7 years | $85,000-$130,000 | $60,000-$95,000 | $0-$100,000 | Weak |
| Clinical Psychology (PsyD/PhD) | 5-7 years | $90,000-$140,000 | $80,000-$120,000 | $200,000 | Depends |
| Political Science | 6-8 years | $80,000-$120,000 | $70,000-$110,000 | -$100,000 | Weak |
| History | 7-9 years | $65,000-$90,000 | $65,000-$95,000 | -$300,000 | No (financially) |
| English | 7-9 years | $55,000-$80,000 | $55,000-$85,000 | -$400,000 | No (financially) |
| Philosophy | 7-9 years | $60,000-$85,000 | $60,000-$90,000 | -$350,000 | No (financially) |
The Academic Job Market Crisis
| Field | % Landing Tenure-Track Job | Avg Time to Tenure Track | Adjunct Pay (Per Course) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Computer Science | 60-70% | 0-2 years | N/A (industry absorbs) |
| Economics | 55-65% | 0-2 years | $5,000-$8,000 |
| Engineering | 50-60% | 0-2 years | N/A (industry absorbs) |
| Biology | 30-40% | 2-5 years postdoc | $3,000-$5,000 |
| Chemistry | 35-45% | 2-4 years postdoc | $3,000-$5,000 |
| Psychology | 25-35% | 1-3 years postdoc | $3,000-$5,000 |
| Political Science | 25-35% | 1-3 years | $3,000-$5,000 |
| History | 20-30% | 2-5 years | $3,000-$4,500 |
| English | 20-25% | 2-5 years | $2,500-$4,000 |
| Philosophy | 20-25% | 2-5 years | $2,500-$4,000 |
In humanities, the majority of PhDs never land the tenure-track position they spent 7-9 years training for.
PhD vs. Master’s vs. Work Experience: 6-Year Comparison
| Path | Cumulative Earnings (6 years) | Year 7 Salary | Year 15 Salary |
|---|---|---|---|
| Work experience (BS, CS field) | $600,000 | $130,000 | $170,000 |
| Master’s (2yr) + Work (4yr) | $480,000 | $140,000 | $175,000 |
| PhD (6yr, funded, CS) | $180,000 | $180,000 (industry) | $250,000 |
| PhD (6yr, funded, English) | $150,000 | $55,000 (adjunct) | $75,000 |
In CS, the PhD holder catches up and surpasses by year 10. In English, they may never catch up.
When a PhD IS Worth It
| Scenario | Why |
|---|---|
| STEM field with strong industry demand | $150K-$300K+ industry salaries |
| Fully funded at top-20 research university | Best training, best placement |
| Economics (top 30 program) | Strong academic AND industry outcomes |
| Genuine passion + realistic backup plan | Industry PhD placements are strong in STEM |
| Want to be a professor AND are in a viable field | Tenure-track positions exist in STEM, econ |
| Research scientist at tech company | PhD required or strongly preferred |
When a PhD is NOT Worth It
| Scenario | Better Alternative |
|---|---|
| Humanities at any program outside top-10 | Career prospects don’t justify 7-9 years |
| Unfunded program (any field) | Never pay for a PhD |
| Primarily motivated by “Dr.” title | Very expensive title |
| Avoiding the job market | PhD delays career, doesn’t avoid market forces |
| Poor relationship with advisor | #1 predictor of PhD failure/misery |
| No industry backup plan in a weak field | Too risky for financial planning |
PhD Stipend vs. Market Salary (What You Give Up)
| Field | Annual PhD Stipend | Market Salary (MS) | Annual Gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Computer Science | $35,000-$45,000 | $120,000+ | -$75,000/yr |
| Engineering | $30,000-$40,000 | $95,000+ | -$55,000/yr |
| Economics | $30,000-$38,000 | $90,000+ | -$52,000/yr |
| Biology | $28,000-$35,000 | $55,000+ | -$20,000/yr |
| English | $20,000-$28,000 | $48,000+ | -$20,000/yr |
| Psychology | $22,000-$32,000 | $50,000+ | -$18,000/yr |
The opportunity cost is highest in fields where the master’s-level market salary is already high (CS, engineering).
Bottom Line
A PhD is a financial asset in STEM and economics, where industry demand produces $120,000-$300,000+ salaries. It’s a financial liability in humanities and most social sciences, where the academic job market is collapsing and alternative careers don’t compensate for 7-9 years of lost earnings. The key principle: never pay for a PhD, always have an industry backup plan, and be honest about whether the academic job market in your field can support your goals.
Related: Is Masters Degree Worth It? | Is MBA Worth It? | Is College Worth It? | Income Percentile Calculator