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Ranking: The Forbes 2023 Top Colleges In America

Princeton University ranked 1st in Forbes’ new American Top Colleges ranking. Photo: Mahlon Lovett (2000)

Princeton University tops the list in Forbes’ “America’s Top Colleges” 2023 ranking.

The annual list ranks 500 colleges across the U.S. based on metrics such as student success, return on investment, and alumni influence. This year’s top 50 includes the typical Ivy League schools but also more than a dozen public colleges including the University of California-Berkeley (#5); the University of Michigan (#23); the University of Virginia (#29); and the University of Maryland-College Park (#34).

WHAT MADE PRINCETON STAND OUT

This year, Princeton landed the  number one spot in both the Forbes and Wall Street Journal rankings. In Forbes, the Ivy League school climbed from No. 4 on last year’s ranking, scoring high across a number of criteria with median early-career salaries north of $88,000 and a 98% six-year graduation rate. Additionally, Princeton provides generous financial aid, covering 100% of tuition and housing for families earning up to $65,000 for the class of 2026. The school offers an average grant aid of $47,136, with average student debt being quite low at just $7,216.

Yale University came in second this year, jumping up from number eight last year. The school scored highly for its impressive $58,715 average grant aid and low average debt of $4,968. Yale grads also cash in comfortable salaries with a median 10-year salary of $163,900. Stanford University ranked third this year, dropping one spot from  last year. The California institution had an average grant aid of $56,211 and average debt of $8,868. Median 10-year salary for Stanford grads was $173,800.

Ranking: The Forbes 2023 Top Colleges In America
Ranking: The Forbes 2023 Top Colleges In America

Memorial Glade and the Campanile at the University of California-Berkeley. Photo by Tia Chen-Wong

PRIVATE SCHOOLS DOMINATE THE TOP 10

Among the top 10 schools in the ranking, eight are private institutions including Princeton, Yale, Stanford, and MIT. Only two public schools landed in the top 10: UC-Berkeley and the University of California-Los Angeles.

Public versus private schools start to even out once the ranking hits the top 25, with public schools such as the University of California-San Diego, the University of Michigan, and the University of California-Santa Barbara making the list.

MIT GRADS EARN TOP PAY

If you’re looking for high long-term pay, look no further than Massachusetts Institute of Technology. While the school dropped from number one last year to number four this year, MIT still ranks highly in terms of pay with a median 10-year salary of $182,800. Harvey Mudd College (#71 overall) ranks second in pay at $177,800.