Rankings / By State
Best Online Colleges in Massachusetts
CollegeRanker Research
What Surprised Us Most
Median graduate earnings across these 50 schools run from $36,966 to $125,557 — a 3.4× gap that shows the category label alone tells you little about payoff.
Massachusetts Bay Community College delivers the most per dollar: roughly $52,654 in median earnings against $7,169 a year in net price — the strongest earnings-to-cost ratio on the list.
Bristol Community College is the lowest-cost school here at $5,547 a year in net price.
Harvard University graduates 97% of its students versus a 56% average across the list — completion, not selectivity, is the clearest sign a degree actually gets finished.
Massachusetts Bay Community College carries the healthiest debt load, with graduates owing just 0.12× their annual earnings.
Surprising Comparisons
- #1 Harvard University ($101,817 earnings) outranks the list's highest earner, MCPHS University ($125,557) — because it does more on mobility and cost.
- Bristol Community College costs $5,547 a year and Emerson College costs $49,180 — yet their graduates earn $38,663 and $62,832, nowhere near the $43,633 price gap.
- Dollar for dollar, Massachusetts Bay Community College beats MCPHS University: comparable career payoff at a fraction of the net price.
The Takeaway
The schools that win this ranking aren't the priciest or the most selective — they're the ones that turn students into earners without burying them in debt, which is exactly what our outcomes-first methodology is built to surface.
What This Means for Students
If you're choosing from this list, start with Massachusetts Bay Community College and Harvard University: pull each school's net price for your income band, weigh projected earnings against the debt you'd take on, and let payoff — not prestige — drive your shortlist.
At a Glance
How the Top Schools Compare
| School | Earnings | Net Price | Graduation | Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Harvard University #1 overall | $101,817 +65% vs avg | $19,066 | 97% | 82 |
| 2 Babson College #2 overall | $123,938 +101% vs avg | $40,514 | 93% | 77 |
| 3 Boston University #3 overall | $83,238 +35% vs avg | $24,402 | 89% | 75 |
| $103,937 +69% vs avg | $41,704 | 91% | 75 | |
| $83,214 +35% vs avg | $39,998 | 93% | 75 |
Score uses our 4-pillar methodology. Earnings % is vs. this list's average.
See full ranking →Key Findings
Best Online Colleges in Massachusetts
Strongest Earnings-to-Cost Ratio: Massachusetts Bay Community College (Net Price: $7,169 | Graduation Rate: 16%)
Strongest Completion Outcomes: Harvard University (97% completion rate)
Highest Earnings Generator: MCPHS University (Median alumni earnings: $125,557)
Research Note
Private nonprofit colleges cost 110% more in net price than publics, while their graduates earn 21% more.
Why this ranking matters
These schools are ranked on the outcomes that actually compound — graduate earnings, upward mobility, debt, and value — using federal tax-records and Scorecard data rather than reputation surveys. The list rewards results over prestige, led by institutions whose graduates earn a median of about $57K ten years out.
How we measure this — full methodology →How we rank · 4 pillars
Federal-source data only. Build your own weighting →
Access & Flexibility Analysis
What does this ranking tell us about online education and the working-adult learner?
$56,023
Median earnings (10yr)
60%
Median graduation rate
$21,983
Median net price
1.9%
Avg. mobility rate
Online programs are where higher education meets the working adult — students balancing jobs, families, and a degree, who need flexibility more than a quad. The category has matured from afterthought to mainstream, and the question has shifted from "does online work?" to "which online programs actually deliver completion and earnings for non-traditional students?"
Across the 50 schools on this list, graduates earn a median of $56,023 ten years after they first enrolled — about $8,023 more than the roughly $48,000 a typical American worker takes home. The median graduation rate is 60%. Net price runs a median of $21,983 a year, with about $23,125 in median federal debt at graduation. An average of 30% of students receive Pell grants, and the typical school moves low-income students into the top income quintile at a rate of 1.9%.
What we’re seeing: the strongest online programs are the ones that pair flexibility with real support and completion, not just open enrollment. Median earnings of $56,023 and a $21,983 net price show that access and outcomes don't have to be a trade-off.
The podium
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The same 50 schools, re-ranked by the outcome that matters to you.
Where the programs are
This ranking scores 50 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, drawing on over 30 million tax records. Among the 47 schools on this list with available data, the typical mobility rate — the share of students who move from the bottom income quintile to the top — averages 1.9%. MCPHS University leads the group at 9.3%, with Lasell University (3.1%) and Babson College (2.8%) close behind.
Who gets in matters as much as what happens after. Across these schools, an average of 7.9% of students start in the bottom income quintile. Bunker Hill Community College leads at 19.8% — evidence of genuine access, not just selective enrollment of already-advantaged students. Schools that pair high access with high mobility are the ones driving real generational change.
Once low-income students enroll, their odds of reaching the top income quintile average 31.1% across this list. MCPHS University posts the highest success rate at 91.3% — a reminder that access without completion and career momentum is an incomplete picture.
Social capital — measured by economic connectedness, or the degree of cross-class friendships on campus — is another dimension Opportunity Insights ties to long-run outcomes. Across these schools it averages 1.61 (1.0 is the national benchmark); Emerson College reaches 1.90, 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 Online Colleges in Massachusetts: Your Questions, Answered
What is the #1 school in the Best Online Colleges in Massachusetts ranking? +
Harvard University in Cambridge, MA ranks #1 in our 2026 Best Online Colleges in Massachusetts ranking. It earns the top spot on the strength of a median $101,817 in graduate earnings ten years out and a 97% graduation rate. Our score is built entirely from federal data — graduation rates, graduate earnings, debt, and social-mobility figures — not reputation surveys.
Which school has the highest graduate earnings? +
MCPHS University posts the highest median earnings on this list at $125,557 ten years after enrollment — well above the $61,613 average across the 50 ranked schools with earnings data. Strong earnings relative to cost are what separate a degree that pays off from one that doesn't.
Which school offers the best value? +
On a pure return-on-cost basis, Massachusetts Bay Community College leads: graduates earn a median $52,654 against net price of about $7,169 a year, the strongest earnings-to-cost ratio in the ranking. Value-minded applicants should weigh that payback against sticker price, not just prestige.
Which school has the highest graduation rate? +
Harvard University has the highest graduation rate in this ranking at 97%, compared with a 56% 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 — what students actually pay after grants and scholarships — is about $22,194 a year across the 50 ranked schools with cost data, with Bristol Community College among the most affordable at roughly $5,547. Net price is a far better guide to affordability than the published sticker price.
How is the Best Online Colleges in Massachusetts 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 50 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
David Krug
Co-Founder, CollegeRanker
David Krug is the co-founder of CollegeRanker and a data systems architect focused on making institutional research accessible to families. He builds the data pipelines and ranking algorithms that power CollegeRanker, drawing from federal datasets and Raj Chetty's Opportunity Insights research to measure what traditional rankings ignore: whether a college actually changes a family's economic trajectory.
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