Find Affordable College Courses

What Do You Want to Study?

Criminalistics & Criminal Science

Criminalistics & Criminal Science

How Much Do Criminalistics & Criminal Science Graduates Earn?

Federal data tracks median earnings of Criminalistics & Criminal Science graduates 1, 4, and 5 years after completion. Wages typically rise steadily as graduates gain experience and move into mid-career roles.

Years Out Median Earnings
1 year $40,812
4 years $44,073
5 years $49,815

By year 5 out, median earnings rise to $49,815 — roughly 22% above the 1-year mark.

Source: U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard, field-of-study earnings tracker.

Is a Degree in Criminalistics & Criminal Science Worth It?

On the earnings side, the federal earnings tracker, Criminalistics & Criminal Science graduates earn a median of $44,073 four years after completion — roughly 16% above the national median for workers with only a high school diploma (~$38,000).

4-year median earnings vs national baseline for Criminalistics & Criminal Science

ROI estimate compares the program’s 4-yr median earnings against the 2023 BLS CPS median earnings for high-school-only workers. Source: U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard + BLS Current Population Survey.

You may also be interested in these closely related fields of study:

Program CIP Code
Criminal Justice and Corrections 43.01
Corrections Administration 43.0113
Corrections and Criminal Justice, Other 43.0199
Corrections 43.0102
Criminal Justice and Corrections 43.0100
Criminal Justice/Law Enforcement Administration 43.0103
Criminal Justice/Police Science 43.0107
Criminal Justice/Safety Studies 43.0104
Critical Incident Response/Special Police Operations 43.0119
Cultural/Archaelogical Resources Protection 43.0123
Cyber/Computer Forensics and Counterterrorism 43.0116
Financial Forensics and Fraud Investigation 43.0117

References

The racial-ethnic minorities count is calculated by taking the total number of students and subtracting white students and international students. This number is then divided by the total number of students to obtain the racial-ethnic minorities percentage.

More about our data sources and methodologies.

Find Schools Near You

Our free school finder matches students with accredited colleges across the U.S.