Rankings / By State
Best Business Colleges in Idaho
- 10
- Schools
- $46,798
- Avg. Earnings
- 47%
- Avg. Graduation
- $14,728
- Avg. Net Price
- $16,799
- Avg. Debt
CollegeRanker Research
What Surprised Us Most
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Graduate earnings span a wide band on this list, from $40,081 at the low end to $54,670 at the top. That 1.4× spread shows how much outcomes vary within a single category.
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College of Southern Idaho offers the strongest payback. Graduates earn a median of $40,916 against $6,095 in annual net price, the best earnings-to-cost ratio in this ranking.
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The most budget-friendly option on this list is College of Southern Idaho, at $6,095 annually in net price.
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Completion rates separate this field: Northwest Nazarene University graduates 65% of its students, well above the 47% list average. Finishing what you start matters as much as where you start.
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Debt-to-earnings ratios favor College of Southern Idaho: graduates owe only 0.20× their yearly income, the most manageable debt burden on the list.
Surprising Comparisons
- The top spot belongs to The College of Idaho ($48,473 earnings), not the highest earner, University of Idaho ($54,670). That is what weighting mobility and value over salary alone produces.
- Price and payoff diverge sharply here. College of Southern Idaho ($6,095/yr) and Northwest Nazarene University ($29,580/yr) produce graduates earning $40,916 and $51,719 respectively, a far narrower earnings gap than the $23,485 cost difference would suggest.
- On a cost-adjusted basis, College of Southern Idaho outperforms University of Idaho: similar career earnings at a much lower net price.
The Takeaway
A consistent pattern: the schools that finish at the top get there by delivering strong earnings, manageable debt, and real mobility rather than by charging more or rejecting more applicants. Those outcomes are what define educational value.
What This Means for Students
For students evaluating these schools, begin with College of Southern Idaho and Northwest Nazarene University. Look past sticker price: pull each school's net price for your income level, compare it against projected earnings, and let the data guide the decision instead of the brand.
Why this ranking matters
Business is one of the higher-return fields in the economy, but the payoff depends heavily on where you study it. Graduates of these programs earn a median of about $46K within a decade, and management analyst roles are projected to grow 10%. We rank programs by the outcomes they produce for graduates, not by reputation.
How we measure this — full methodology →How we rank · 4 pillars
Federal-source data only. Build your own weighting →
Data Behind This Page Updated 2026-06-22
Source datasets
Methodology
Schools are scored on the CollegeRanker 4-Pillar Algorithm: Economic Outcomes (30%), Social Mobility (25–35%), Academic Quality (15–20%), and Value (20–25%). Every weight is published and every figure traces to a public dataset.
See the full methodology and weights →Confidence notes
- Earnings, completion, and debt figures come from federal administrative records — tax data and student-aid filings — not surveys or self-reports, the highest-confidence tier of education data available.
- Social-mobility estimates are drawn from de-identified tax records covering more than 30 million students (Opportunity Insights).
- Where an institution is missing a metric, it is excluded from that metric rather than imputed, so averages are never inflated by guesses.
Limitations
- Federal earnings data primarily cover students who received federal financial aid; outcomes for non-aided students may differ.
- Earnings are measured roughly ten years after enrollment, so they describe how earlier cohorts fared — historical outcomes, not guarantees of future results.
- An institution's field-of-study mix affects raw earnings; scores reflect measured outcomes and are not fully major-adjusted unless explicitly noted.
- Net price is an average; the actual cost a given student pays varies widely by family income.
At a Glance
How the Top Schools Compare
| School | Earnings | Net Price | Graduation | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 The College of Idaho #1 overall | $48,473 ▲ +4% vs avg | $19,481 | 63% | 81 |
| 2 University of Idaho #2 overall | $54,670 ▲ +17% vs avg | $14,831 | 59% | 76 |
| 3 Boise State University #3 overall | $51,658 ▲ +10% vs avg | $21,610 | 61% | 76 |
| $40,916 ▼ -13% vs avg | $6,095 | 34% | 73 | |
| $46,001 ▼ -2% vs avg | $15,635 | 43% | 71 |
Score uses our 4-pillar methodology. Earnings % is vs. this list's average.
See full ranking →Executive Summary
Best Business Colleges in Idaho
This analysis ranks 10 institutions on graduate earnings, social mobility, completion, and cost. Across the list, alumni earn a median of $46,798 ten years after enrolling, against an average graduation rate of 47% and an average net price of $14,728.
Key takeaways
- Strongest Earnings-to-Cost Ratio: College of Southern Idaho — Net Price: $6,095 | Graduation Rate: 34%
- Strongest Completion Outcomes: Northwest Nazarene University — 65% completion rate
- Highest Earnings Generator: University of Idaho — Median alumni earnings: $54,670
Our Analysis Found
Private nonprofit colleges cost 110% more in net price than publics, while their graduates earn 21% more.
Management Education Analysis
What does this ranking tell us about leadership and management education?
$46,001
Median earnings (10yr)
41%
Median graduation rate
$13,512
Median net price
1.5%
Avg. mobility rate
Management education makes a blunt promise: pay now, earn more later. Top-tier programs keep that promise through network effects and placement outcomes. Many others raise earnings barely enough to cover their cost. The spread in outcomes across programs is wider here than in almost any other discipline.
Start with the medians across these 10 schools. Graduates earn a median of $46,001 ten years after enrollment. The median graduation rate is 41%, and the typical net price (what students pay after grants) runs $13,512 a year with about $19,270 in federal debt. Pell grants reach 25% of students on average, and the average mobility rate, the share of students lifted from the bottom income quintile to the top, is 1.5%.
In management education, network effects amplify everything. Graduates earn a median of $46,001 ten years after enrollment, and The College of Idaho leads the field. The gap between the top and the middle is wide enough that school selection may be the most consequential financial decision in this category.
The podium
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Full rankings
Why it ranks #1
The College of Idaho lands at #1 with a 81/100 composite, led by social mobility (81/100) and pulled down by value per dollar (55/100). Graduates earn a median $48,473 a decade after enrolling, 4% above this list's average, and net price runs $19,481 a year, above the field. Because the methodology weights social mobility (35%) and value (20%) above prestige, that mobility is what puts it near the top.
Pillar breakdown
Why it ranks #2
University of Idaho lands at #2 with a 76/100 composite, led by social mobility (80/100) and pulled down by academic quality (55/100). Graduates earn a median $54,670 a decade after enrolling, 17% above this list's average, and net price runs $14,831 a year. Because the methodology weights social mobility (35%) and value (20%) above prestige, that mobility is what puts it near the top.
Pillar breakdown
Why it ranks #3
Boise State University lands at #3 with a 76/100 composite, led by social mobility (79/100) and pulled down by value per dollar (57/100). Graduates earn a median $51,658 a decade after enrolling, 10% above this list's average, and net price runs $21,610 a year, above the field. Because the methodology weights social mobility (35%) and value (20%) above prestige, that mobility is what puts it near the top.
Pillar breakdown
Why it ranks #4
College of Southern Idaho lands at #4 with a 73/100 composite, led by value per dollar (87/100) and pulled down by economic outcomes (65/100). Graduates earn a median $40,916 a decade after enrolling, 13% below this list's average, and net price runs $6,095 a year, well under the field. Because the methodology weights social mobility (35%) and value (20%) above prestige, that low cost is what puts it near the top, even with below-average salaries.
Pillar breakdown
Why it ranks #5
Lewis-Clark State College lands at #5 with a 71/100 composite, led by social mobility (76/100) and pulled down by academic quality (62/100). Graduates earn a median $46,001 a decade after enrolling, 2% below this list's average, and net price runs $15,635 a year. Because the methodology weights social mobility (35%) and value (20%) above prestige, that mobility is what puts it near the top, even with below-average salaries.
Pillar breakdown
Why it ranks #6
Northwest Nazarene University lands at #6 with a 71/100 composite, led by social mobility (83/100) and pulled down by value per dollar (35/100). Graduates earn a median $51,719 a decade after enrolling, 11% above this list's average, and net price runs $29,580 a year, above the field. Because the methodology weights social mobility (35%) and value (20%) above prestige, that mobility is what puts it near the top.
Pillar breakdown
Why it ranks #7
Idaho State University lands at #7 with a 69/100 composite, led by social mobility (77/100) and pulled down by economic outcomes (62/100). Graduates earn a median $45,608 a decade after enrolling, 3% below this list's average, and net price runs $12,193 a year, well under the field. Because the methodology weights social mobility (35%) and value (20%) above prestige, that mobility is what puts it near the top, even with below-average salaries.
Pillar breakdown
Why it ranks #8
North Idaho College lands at #8 with a 67/100 composite, led by value per dollar (80/100) and pulled down by academic quality (48/100). Graduates earn a median $40,081 a decade after enrolling, 14% below this list's average, and net price runs $10,575 a year, well under the field. Because the methodology weights social mobility (35%) and value (20%) above prestige, that low cost is what puts it near the top, even with below-average salaries.
Pillar breakdown
Why it ranks #9
College of Western Idaho lands at #9 with a 59/100 composite, led by economic outcomes (92/100) and pulled down by social mobility (43/100). Net price runs $8,500 a year, well under the field. Strong earnings drive the rank, but with mobility weighted 35% and value 20%, salary alone can only take a school so far.
Pillar breakdown
Why it ranks #10
College of Eastern Idaho lands at #10 with a 53/100 composite, led by value per dollar (73/100) and pulled down by social mobility (43/100). Graduates earn a median $42,057 a decade after enrolling, 10% below this list's average, and net price runs $8,778 a year, well under the field. Because the methodology weights social mobility (35%) and value (20%) above prestige, that low cost is what puts it near the top, even with below-average salaries.
Pillar breakdown
Cut it by what you care about
The same 10 schools, re-ranked by the outcome that matters to you.
Where the programs — and the jobs are
Where these graduates work
Graduates of these programs most often become Management Analysts and related roles — a field with $99,410 median pay and 10% projected growth.
See the Management Analyst career guide →This ranking scores 10 institutions on graduation rates, graduate earnings, debt burdens, and social mobility data from Opportunity Insights. Every data point comes from federal sources. No surveys, no opinions.
Social mobility carries the heaviest weight in our algorithm. We use Raj Chetty's Mobility Report Card — built on 30 million anonymized tax records — to measure whether a college changes a family's economic trajectory across generations. Schools that take low-income students and launch them into higher earnings rank higher than schools that admit wealthy students and take credit for their success.
The transparency penalty matters here. Schools that don't report their data get scored lower than schools that do. If an institution won't show you its numbers, we think you should know that before you write them a tuition check.
The story behind the ranking
A ranking gives you an order; these charts give you the shape. They show how this group of schools spreads across the four things that decide whether a degree pays off — what graduates earn, whether they finish, how far they move up, and what it costs. Look for the standouts, the outliers, and the trade-offs the list alone can't show.
Earnings Outcomes
What graduates earn 10 years after enrolling. Data from College Scorecard.
Distribution of Median Earnings
Earnings vs. Net Price
Top-left = best value. Top-ranked schools are highlighted.
Completion & Access
Graduation rates and who gets in. Data from College Scorecard & IPEDS.
Graduation Rates
Pell Grant Rate vs. Graduation Rate
Right = more low-income students. Higher = more graduate.
What the Mobility Data Says
The backbone of this ranking is social-mobility data from Raj Chetty's Mobility Report Card, which draws on more than 30 million tax records. A school's mobility rate is the share of its students who move from the bottom income quintile to the top. Among the 8 schools on this list with available data, that rate averages 1.5%. Lewis-Clark State College leads the group at 2.1%, with The College of Idaho (1.9%) and North Idaho College (1.5%) close behind.
Who gets in matters as much as what happens after. Across these schools, an average of 9.2% of students start in the bottom income quintile. North Idaho College leads at 14.1%, which signals an admissions door that is actually open to low-income students. Schools that pair high access with high mobility are the ones driving generational change.
Once low-income students enroll, their odds of reaching the top income quintile average 19.1% across this list. The College of Idaho posts the highest success rate at 34.6%. Access without completion and career momentum is an incomplete picture, and this is the number that completes it.
Social capital, measured by economic connectedness, captures the degree of cross-class friendship on campus, another dimension Opportunity Insights ties to long-run outcomes. Across these schools it averages 1.25 against a national benchmark of 1.0. Northwest Nazarene University reaches 1.59, the highest on the list.
Mobility, access, and social-capital figures from Raj Chetty's Mobility Report Card & the Opportunity Insights Social Capital Atlas.
Cost & Debt
What families actually pay and what students owe. Data from College Scorecard.
Median Debt at Graduation
Frequently Asked Questions
Best Business Colleges in Idaho: Your Questions, Answered
What is the #1 school in the Best Business Colleges in Idaho ranking? +
The College of Idaho in Caldwell, ID ranks #1 in our 2026 Best Business Colleges in Idaho ranking. It earns the top spot on the strength of a median $48,473 in graduate earnings ten years after enrollment and a 63% graduation rate. Our score is built entirely from federal data on graduation rates, graduate earnings, debt, and social mobility. Reputation surveys play no part.
Which school has the highest graduate earnings? +
University of Idaho posts the highest median earnings on this list: $54,670 ten years after enrollment, well above the $46,798 average across the 9 ranked schools with earnings data. Earnings that outpace cost are what separate a degree that pays off from one that does not.
Which school offers the best value? +
On a pure return-on-cost basis, College of Southern Idaho leads: graduates earn a median $40,916 against net price of about $6,095 a year, the strongest earnings-to-cost ratio in the ranking. Applicants should weigh that payback against sticker price rather than prestige.
Which school has the highest graduation rate? +
Northwest Nazarene University has the highest graduation rate in this ranking at 65%, compared with a 47% average across the list. Completion matters because the students who finish are the ones who actually capture the earnings and mobility gains a degree promises.
How much does it cost to attend these schools? +
The average net price, meaning what students actually pay after grants and scholarships, is about $14,728 a year across the 10 ranked schools with cost data. College of Southern Idaho is among the most affordable at roughly $6,095. Net price is a far better guide to affordability than the published sticker price.
How is the Best Business Colleges in Idaho ranking calculated? +
We score every school on a four-pillar algorithm: economic outcomes (graduate earnings and debt), social mobility (Raj Chetty's Mobility Report Card, built on more than 30 million anonymized tax records), academic quality (graduation and retention), and value (net price and loan burden). Social mobility carries the heaviest weight, so schools that lift low-income students into higher earnings rank above those that simply admit wealthy students. Every input comes from federal data, and schools that withhold their numbers are scored lower for it.
How many schools are ranked and where does the data come from? +
This ranking evaluates 10 institutions using the U.S. Department of Education's College Scorecard, the Opportunity Insights Mobility Report Card and Social Capital Atlas, Times Higher Education, and NCES IPEDS. There are no opinion surveys or paid placements. The order is determined by the data alone and refreshed as new federal figures are released.
Sources & Citations
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