Try GOLD - Free
How To Pay For Grad School
Kiplinger's Personal Finance
|June 2018
Probably the worst Christmas present I ever got was a bill for $31,000 in student loans from Uncle Sam in December 2015. A few weeks earlier, I’d received my master’s in mass communications.
I’ll be honest: My decision to pursue an advanced degree was made more out of fear than foresight. I was placing my bets on a career in an industry not known for six-figure salaries or job security. During my final semester as an undergraduate, I worried that a bachelor’s in journalism wasn’t going to cut it in the real world, so I made what seemed like a safe bet: incur debt now for a better future later.
Certain professions, such as medicine and law, require advanced training. Many others—including mine—don’t. In these fields, consider whether a graduate degree is worth the cost, especially if you have to put your career on hold while you’re in school.
The average annual tuition for a graduate degree at a public college or university is $30,000; for a private school, it’s $40,000, according to Peterson’s, a college information company. (If you get a doctorate, it will take several years, and you’ll spend much more.)
This story is from the June 2018 edition of Kiplinger's Personal Finance.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Kiplinger's Personal Finance
Kiplinger's Personal Finance
NAVIGATING MEDICARE ENROLLMENT
Failing to sign up on time can be a costly mistake.
2 mins
March 2026
Kiplinger's Personal Finance
HOW TO LOWER YOUR TAX BILL
The One Big Beautiful Bill Act brought a host of changes that could affect your 2025 tax return. We'll show you how to make the most of them and get other breaks that reduce what you owe-or maximize your refund.
13 mins
March 2026
Kiplinger's Personal Finance
Trim Your Child-Care Costs
Working parents can take advantage of tax breaks and local assistance programs.
5 mins
March 2026
Kiplinger's Personal Finance
Focus on Income First
EVERY reader knows I am unfazed at the sacrifice of a percentage point or two of share price or net asset value to secure a higher yield or cash distribution. That underscores my reverence for short-term high-yield bonds, packaged car leases and credit card bills, floating-rate corporate bank loans, and the many multisector and flexible exchange-traded and closed-end funds that own these assets or some of each. These investments reliably distribute upward of 5% and sometimes 7%. Add funds or ETFs that write options on stocks or stock indexes to pay out 8% or more, and you might easily overlook how the Federal Reserve has slashed the interest rate it controls to 3.5%—the low since September 2022—with further cuts to follow this year.
2 mins
March 2026
Kiplinger's Personal Finance
Cleaning Up the Paper Clutter
Once you hit retirement, keeping tax returns from decades ago can become unwieldy.
3 mins
March 2026
Kiplinger's Personal Finance
RESOLVE CONFLICTS WITH YOUR ADVISER
Knowing how to deal with a disagreement can improve both your finances and your relationship with your planner.
3 mins
March 2026
Kiplinger's Personal Finance
Longevity Advice for Women
IN recent columns, I have written about longevity literacy and the need for long-term-care planning (see “Living in Retirement,” Dec. 2025 and Feb. 2026). To see how women fit into this picture, I interviewed Maddy Dychtwald, cofounder of AgeWave, a research and consulting firm focused on aging, and author of Ageless Aging: A Woman’s Guide to Increasing Healthspan, Brainspan and Lifespan. Dychtwald interviewed dozens of researchers, scientists and physicians for her book, and these are some of her key takeaways.
2 mins
March 2026
Kiplinger's Personal Finance
MORE TOOLS TO BUILD A BOND LADDER
THE market for exchange-traded funds that help build bond ladders is growing.
1 mins
March 2026
Kiplinger's Personal Finance
MAKE LEARNING A LIFELONG AFFAIR
GOING back to live on a college campus, taking classes, and mixing and mingling with students young enough to be their grandchildren wasn't originally on Anna and Jeffry Young's retirement bingo card. Yet that's their life these days.
12 mins
March 2026
Kiplinger's Personal Finance
GREAT TRIPS FOR SOLO TRAVELERS
Planning a vacation for one? From mountain treks to wellness retreats, you can find a getaway that suits your style—and that builds in some companionship, too.
10 mins
March 2026
Translate
Change font size
