51% of San Joaquin Valley College-Rancho Mirage students earn more than a typical U.S. high-school graduate (about $28,000/yr) ten years after starting — measured from IRS tax records, not surveys.
Cumulative net gain over a high-school-only earner at different career lengths, with tuition and debt interest already subtracted. Built on IRS-verified federal earnings — not self-reported surveys.
Who the college serves and whether the payoff reaches everyone — earnings ten years after starting (IRS-linked), with access measures from federal enrollment data.
By gender
Women
$34,114
Men
$51,079
33% gap between the two groups
By family-income background
From lower-income families
$35,769
From higher-income families
$53,531
33% gap between the two groups
By student status (FAFSA)
Dependent students
$39,972
Independent students
$37,672
6% gap between the two groups
59%
First-generation students
66%
Take federal student loans
79%
Born in the U.S.
Who studies here
White 13%Hispanic 72%Asian 1%Black 4%Other 10%
Undergraduate enrollment by race/ethnicity. Federal data does not report earnings by race.
Net price by family income
What students actually pay after grants and scholarships, by household income as of 2024.
Family income
Average net price / yr
Family income $0–$30k
$26,875
$30k–$48k
$28,653
$48k–$75k
$29,714
$75k–$110k
$28,167
$110k+
$32,789
How San Joaquin Valley College-Rancho Mirage compares
This college against the California and national averages — higher earnings and lower cost/debt are better.
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Best-paying majors at San Joaquin Valley College-Rancho Mirage
Fields of study ranked by their own ROI — earnings five years after graduating against the cost and debt. Click a major for the deep dive.
Degree Return is an independent informational service. ROI figures are estimates based on past student cohorts; individual earnings vary widely. This is not financial, legal, or admissions advice. We never compute ROI where federal data is missing.
Degree Return is an independent project and is not affiliated with the U.S. Department of Education, NCES, any college, or any government agency. Source data is public domain.
Data as of 2024 · sourced from the U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard.