Best-Value Colleges in Utah
5 Utah 4-year colleges ranked by return on investment — 10-year graduate earnings per dollar of net price — among schools that beat the state median on earnings and graduation rate.
The best-value college in Utah is Brigham Young University, Provo — a net price of $14,487 against $75,790 in median 10-year earnings, an ROI of 5.2×, with a 82% graduation rate. Every school here turns a modest cost into outsized, above-median earnings.
| # | School | Net price /yr | 10-yr earnings | ROI (earn ÷ price) | Grad rate | In-state tuition |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Brigham Young University Provo, UT | $14,487 | $75,790 | 5.2× | 82% | $6,496 |
| 2 | University of Utah Salt Lake City, UT | $13,172 | $67,170 | 5.1× | 64% | $9,315 |
| 3 | Utah State University Logan, UT | $12,869 | $54,022 | 4.2× | 57% | $9,228 |
| 4 | Neumont College of Computer Science Salt Lake City, UT | $28,979 | $97,827 | 3.4× | 57% | $27,375 |
| 5 | Westminster University Salt Lake City, UT | $26,536 | $66,215 | 2.5× | 69% | $41,416 |
How we ranked this
From every Utah four-year college that publishes net price, 10-year median earnings, and graduation rate, we keep only those that beat the state median on earnings and that graduate at least 45% of students (or the state median grad rate, whichever is higher). We then rank by ROI = 10-year median earnings ÷ average annual net price — the dollars of graduate earnings each dollar of net price buys — highest first. This rewards genuine return on investment rather than the cheapest sticker price, and the 4-year + outcome guards keep out the low-completion and 2-year outliers a pure price sort surfaces. Colleges missing any of the three figures are excluded, never estimated. Minimum 5 qualifying schools required to publish a page.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best-value college in Utah?+
Brigham Young University in Provo has the highest return on investment among Utah 4-year colleges that beat the state median on outcomes: a net price of $14,487 against $75,790 in 10-year median earnings — an ROI of 5.2× (dollars earned per dollar of annual net price) — with a 82% graduation rate.
What does "net price" mean?+
Net price is the average annual cost students actually pay after grants and scholarships are subtracted from the full cost of attendance — a far better affordability measure than sticker tuition. We use the College Scorecard average net price.
How is "best value" defined here?+
Value means return on investment, not cheapness. Among Utah four-year colleges that beat the state median on BOTH 10-year graduate earnings and graduation rate (and graduate at least 45% of students), we rank by the ROI ratio = 10-year median earnings ÷ average annual net price. The school that turns each tuition dollar into the most graduate earnings ranks first.
Is the cheapest college always the best value?+
No. A rock-bottom price that leads to low earnings is worse value than a moderate price that leads to high earnings. That is exactly why we rank by the earnings-to-net-price ratio rather than by lowest price, and require above-median earnings and graduation rates first. Colleges missing net price, earnings, or graduation data are excluded rather than estimated.
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Data sources: U.S. Dept. of Education College Scorecard · IPEDS. Figures are the most recent values published in each federal dataset; cells with no published value are shown as “—” and never estimated. CertiHomes Education does not sell rankings or accept placement fees.