Is a Medicine Degree from Harvard University a Debt Trap?
Degree · Ratio: 1.51x
Median Student Debt
Median 1-Year Earnings
Loan Projection
The Nihilism Index™
Years to pay off principal at 15% of gross earnings
✓ Manageable Repayment Timeline
At 15% discretionary income, principal payoff in 10.0 years is achievable. Aggressive refinancing can minimize total interest.
Federal Signals
3-Year Cohort Default Rate
This default rate is at or below the national average (~10%), suggesting most borrowers manage repayment successfully.
Federal Scrutiny Flag
Harvard University is currently on the U.S. Department of Education’s Heightened Cash Monitoring list. This means the federal government has identified financial or compliance concerns at this institution. Students should verify the school’s financial stability before enrolling.
The Bottom Line
Professional and doctoral programs carry an implicit promise: years of sacrifice now, high earnings later. For Medicine from Harvard University, that promise collapses under the numbers. At $99,160 in median debt and only $65,850 in first-year post-graduation earnings, the 1.51x ratio places this program deep in debt trap territory — despite the advanced credential.
The critical question is whether first-year earnings reflect the true career trajectory. Some doctoral programs — particularly in medicine — show low initial earnings because of residency or fellowship compensation, with dramatic increases in years 3–7. If this program follows that pattern, the long-term picture may differ significantly. However, if this field lacks a clear high-earning track (humanities PhDs, certain social science doctorates), the debt represents a structural trap. Negative amortization during low-income fellowship years means the balance grows substantially before full earning potential kicks in.
Explore Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) if your field offers qualifying employment — hospitals, universities, and government agencies all count. For non-PSLF paths, income-driven repayment caps payments during low-earning years. If you’re pre-enrollment, seriously evaluate whether the research indicates this specific program at this specific institution justifies the investment versus lower-cost alternatives with comparable outcomes.
Data sources: U.S. Dept. of Education College Scorecard, Federal Cohort Default Rates, and Federal Student Aid HCM List. See our methodology.
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