The diploma on the wall used to mean something undeniable. Get the degree, land the job, build the life. For generations of Americans, that formula felt airtight. In 2026, it feels a lot more complicated.
A national poll conducted in late February surveyed more than 1,400 U.S. adults and found that nearly six in ten said a four-year college degree is no longer worth the cost. Only about one in four said it still pays off. That is a striking reversal from just over a decade ago, when a 2013 Gallup survey found that 70 percent of Americans believed college was worth the price.
So what changed — and does the data actually back up the doubt?
The Case That a College Degree Still Pays Off
The numbers in favor of higher education are hard to dismiss. College graduates with a bachelor’s degree are half as likely to be unemployed and typically earn 86 percent more than those with only a high school diploma, ultimately outpacing them by $1.2 million in median lifetime earnings.
Recent college graduates earn $20,000 more annually than peers of the same age whose highest credential is a high school diploma. Even after factoring in student loan payments, degree holders still outearn those who did not complete a college degree by an average of $8,000 a year.
Beyond the paycheck, the broader advantages are real
- College graduates are more likely to have jobs offering health insurance, retirement benefits, and paid vacation
- During the worst of the COVID-19 recession, the unemployment rate for those with no college experience was 18 percent, compared to 10 percent for bachelor’s degree holders.
- By 2031, 72 percent of jobs in the U.S. will require some form of postsecondary education or training
The long-term picture, for the typical graduate, still favors getting the college degree.
The Case Against — and Why So Many Are Skeptical
The skepticism is not irrational. The average annual cost of tuition, fees, and room and board at a four-year institution has exceeded $28,000 for public schools and $57,000 for private institutions in recent years — a six-figure commitment before a single paycheck arrives.
Student debt in the United States has surpassed $1.7 trillion, and the weight of that burden falls unevenly. Students who borrow for college but never graduate face the worst outcome — carrying full loan debt without the earnings premium that comes with a completed degree, with default rates two to three times higher than those who finish.
When asked what they would encourage a high school graduate to do today, 55 percent of poll respondents chose skilled trades or vocational training, while fewer than a quarter recommended a four-year college degree.
The trades, coding bootcamps, and professional certifications have never been more credible — or more accessible.
College Degree Value Depends Heavily on These Factors
The honest answer is that a college degree is not a single product. Its value varies enormously depending on
- Field of study — STEM, healthcare, and engineering fields consistently produce strong salaries and job security. Some humanities programs, while intellectually rich, lead to more varied financial outcomes
- Institution type — More than half of students at public four-year universities complete their degree with zero debt. For-profit college students face a tougher road, with higher dropout rates and weaker earnings potential
- Whether you finish — A degree’s value depends heavily on completing it. National data shows that only 64 percent of students who began a bachelor’s degree at a four-year institution completed it within six years
- How much debt you take on — A four-year degree is still financially sound if total debt stays under $30,000 and the student actually graduates
What the Smartest Students Are Doing Differently in 2026
The students making the strongest case for higher education today are the ones treating it as a deliberate investment rather than a default next step. They research graduate earnings by major and institution before enrolling. They exhaust every scholarship and grant option available. They align their college degree with specific career goals rather than chasing a credential without a plan.
The conclusion is neither that college is always worth it nor that it is a scam — but rather that it is a high-variance investment whose payoff can be dramatically improved with better choices and smarter financing.
The diploma still opens doors. But in 2026, the cost of walking through the wrong one has never been higher.

