Graduate Debt
The Office of Higher Education collects graduate debt data from Minnesota institutions eligible to participate in a Minnesota-funded financial aid program to measure how much students borrow to fund their postsecondary education.
The Office reports the median debt graduates incurred to complete a postsecondary award only at the institution conferring the award for each award level. In other words, data does not include any debt a student may have incurred from previously attended institutions, and debt incurred to receive multiple awards is not combined. For example, debt reported for graduates with a master’s degree only includes debt incurred to receive a master’s degree at the institution where the student received the master’s degree. It does not include any other additional debt a student might have accumulated while completing their bachelor’s degree.
Data Trends
Data shows that the type of degree a graduate received effects the amount of their median debt. Since 2012, median debt declined slightly across all undergraduate awards. Over the same period, student loan debt increased for graduate awards above a master’s degree. Other findings include:
- Fewer students, across all award types, borrowed to finance their postsecondary education.
- Student debt amounts increased as the award type and the length of the program increased.
- Graduates with associate, bachelor’s, master’s, and doctoral degrees from private for-profit institutions had higher average median student loan debt than graduates from public or private non-profit institutions.
- Minnesota’s federal student loan default rate continues to stay below the national rate and that of neighboring states.
Prior Reports
2022
2021
2020
2019
2018
2016