Allied Health Diagnostic, Intervention, and Treatment Professions at HCI College
Undergraduate Certificate or Diploma
hci.eduAnalysis
At $15,336 in debt for earnings around $45,000, this certificate appears financially manageable based on what similar allied health programs in Florida typically produce. The debt-to-earnings ratio of 0.34 sits comfortably below the danger zone, meaning graduates would owe roughly four months of their first-year salary—a burden most can handle with standard repayment plans. However, the estimated earnings fall well short of what top-performing programs in Florida achieve: Polk State and Seminole State graduates earn $13,000-$16,000 more annually, a significant gap that compounds over a career.
The challenge is that with small graduate cohorts, we're working from state averages rather than actual outcomes from HCI College specifically. The debt estimate, drawn from just three comparable Florida programs, may not reflect what students here actually borrow. What we can say is that allied health certificates broadly tend to be reliable credentials—the national median earnings of $45,746 confirms these aren't dead-end programs. But the wide variation in Florida outcomes (from $45,000 to over $60,000) suggests that where you get this training matters enormously, likely reflecting differences in specific specializations, clinical placement quality, or regional job markets.
If your child has been accepted here, ask detailed questions about job placement rates, which specific allied health roles graduates enter, and whether the program leads to credentials that travel beyond the West Palm Beach area. The financial framework looks sustainable, but you want evidence this particular program delivers on the promise.
Where HCI College Stands
Earnings vs. debt across all allied health diagnostic, intervention, and treatment professions certificate's programs nationally
Compare to Similar Programs in Florida
Allied Health Diagnostic, Intervention, and Treatment Professions certificate's programs at peer institutions in Florida (69 total in state)
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| School | In-State Tuition | Earnings (1yr)* | Earnings (4yr) | Median Debt* | Debt/Earnings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $20,028 | $45,024* | — | $15,336* | — | |
| $3,366 | $60,894* | — | $11,000* | 0.18 | |
| $3,227 | $57,049* | — | —* | — | |
| $3,100 | $54,209* | $48,007 | $5,625* | 0.10 | |
| $3,246 | $52,939* | — | —* | — | |
| — | $52,092* | $64,877 | $11,168* | 0.21 | |
| National Median | — | $45,746* | — | $14,167* | 0.31 |
Career Paths
Occupations commonly associated with allied health diagnostic, intervention, and treatment professions graduates
Medical Dosimetrists
Physician Assistants
Anesthesiologist Assistants
Nuclear Technicians
Nuclear Monitoring Technicians
Radiation Therapists
Nuclear Medicine Technologists
Diagnostic Medical Sonographers
Health Specialties Teachers, Postsecondary
Respiratory Therapists
Radiologic Technologists and Technicians
Magnetic Resonance Imaging Technologists
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 HCI College, approximately 32% 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 25 similar programs in FL. Actual outcomes may vary.