Analysis
A specialized health sciences college charging $26,500 in debt for a public health bachelor's is hard to justify when comparable New York programs produce similar outcomes. Based on peer institutions across the state, first-year earnings around $39,000 put graduates in a manageable debt position—roughly eight months of income—but nothing about these estimates suggests Albany College distinguishes itself from far less expensive state options.
The real question is whether this institution's focus on pharmacy and health sciences translates into better opportunities for public health graduates specifically. The data suppression here (too few graduates to report) raises a yellow flag: either this is a very small program or graduates aren't consistently entering the workforce in trackable ways. Meanwhile, CUNY Hunter graduates earn an estimated $47,000 their first year—$8,000 more annually—often with lower debt loads given public university tuition.
For families considering a $26,500 investment, the lack of program-specific outcomes should prompt direct questions to admissions: Where do your public health graduates actually work? What percentage enter the field versus pharmacy or clinical roles? At these estimated earnings levels, you're paying private college prices for what appears to be a state-median outcome, and that math only works if this school opens doors the data can't yet show.
Where Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences Stands
Earnings vs. debt across all public health bachelors's programs nationally
Compare to Similar Programs in New York
Public Health bachelors's programs at peer institutions in New York (43 total in state)
Scroll to see more →
| School | In-State Tuition | Earnings (1yr)* | Earnings (4yr) | Median Debt* | Debt/Earnings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $40,375 | $39,164* | — | $26,500* | — | |
| $7,382 | $47,444* | $61,535 | —* | — | |
| $40,880 | $46,442* | — | $26,000* | 0.56 | |
| $66,014 | $44,516* | — | $12,133* | 0.27 | |
| $17,922 | $43,383* | $43,935 | $30,904* | 0.71 | |
| $63,061 | $43,280* | — | $27,000* | 0.62 | |
| National Median | — | $37,548* | — | $26,000* | 0.69 |
Career Paths
Occupations commonly associated with public health graduates
Physicists
Medical and Health Services Managers
Medical Scientists, Except Epidemiologists
Genetic Counselors
Epidemiologists
Physics Teachers, Postsecondary
Health Specialties Teachers, Postsecondary
Environmental Scientists and Specialists, Including Health
Climate Change Policy Analysts
Environmental Restoration Planners
Industrial Ecologists
Occupational Health and Safety Specialists
About This Data
Source: U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard (October 2025 release)
Population: Graduates who received federal financial aid (Title IV grants or loans). At Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, approximately 29% of students receive Pell grants. Students who did not receive federal aid are not included in these figures.
Earnings: Median earnings from IRS W-2 data for graduates who are employed and not enrolled in further education, measured 1 year after completion. Earnings are pre-tax and include wages, salaries, and self-employment income.
Debt: Median cumulative federal loan debt at graduation. Does not include private loans or Parent PLUS loans borrowed on behalf of students.
Estimated Earnings: Actual earnings data is not available for this program (typically due to privacy thresholds when fewer than 30 graduates reported earnings). The estimate shown is based on the median of 17 similar programs in NY. Actual outcomes may vary.