Harvard University vs Princeton University

Princeton University reports the higher median earnings ten years after entry ($110,066 vs $101,817). Princeton University recoups its four-year net cost faster (about 0.3 yrs vs 1.3 yrs).

Measure Harvard UniversityMA Princeton UniversityNJ
Median earnings, 10 yrs after entry$101,817$110,066
Years to recoup four-year net cost1.3 yrs0.3 yrs
Average net price per year$19,066$6,128
Sticker cost of attendance per year$85,540$84,040
Share earning above a high-school grad86.9%80.9%
Six-year graduation rate97.6%97.6%
First-year retention (full-time)98.3%98.4%
Admission rate3.6%4.6%
Median federal debt at graduation$14,000$10,320
Undergraduate enrollment7,6015,709
Financial health (NACUBO CFI)7.27.4

Highlighted cells mark the stronger figure on measures with a clear better direction (admission rate and enrollment are shown for context only, with no winner). “Years to recoup” divides four-year net cost by the annual earnings premium over a state high-school graduate. A transparent data comparison, not an Ibex endorsement or a guarantee of any individual outcome; your program and aid package will differ.

Is Harvard University or Princeton University a better value?

On the transparent payback measure, Princeton University recoups its four-year net cost faster (about 0.3 yrs vs 1.3 yrs).. Value depends on your program, your net price after aid, and your goals; use the table as a starting point and check each school's profile for peer context.

Which costs more, Harvard University or Princeton University?

Harvard University's average net price is $19,066 per year and Princeton University's is $6,128 (College Scorecard). Net price is what students actually pay after grant aid, and varies by family income.

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Value rankings

Source: U.S. Department of Education, College Scorecard & IPEDS (2024-25); earnings baselines from the U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-year. Compiled by Ibex Insights. For informational planning only, not financial advice. See the methodology.