Communications Graduate Salaries in California
Federal earnings data for every California college offering Communications, ranked by 10-year median graduate salary. Sourced from the U.S. Department of Education's College Scorecard — real tax-reported income, not surveys.
Communications in California. Communications grads who pair the major with a hard skill (data, marketing analytics, video editing) earn 2x what generalists earn. Program quality and internship access matter more than school prestige.
Typical career paths: Public Relations Manager, Content Strategist, Journalist, Marketing Coordinator, Social Media Manager. Median starting salary range: $45,000–$72,000. School choice can swing graduate earnings by 30–60% — which is why we rank by federal data, not prestige.
| # | School | 10-yr earnings | Net price/yr |
|---|---|---|---|
| Live earnings data is loading or not yet available for Communications programs in California. Browse all California schools. | |||
Source: U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard. Earnings are 10-year median income for graduates of each institution (all majors, since program-level earnings are released only for select fields). Refreshed every 24 hours.
Get personalized Communications school matches
Take the 3-minute fit quiz — we'll rank these schools (and the rest of the country) by your GPA, budget, and priorities, then email your top 5 with estimated net price after aid.
Communications salary in other states
Other major salaries in California
Frequently asked questions
What do Communications graduates earn in California?
Earnings data is not yet available for Communications graduates in California. Try our /search page to find programs in this state.
Which California school has the highest Communications graduate salary?
Live data not yet available; check /search for California programs.
How is "graduate salary" measured?
These figures come from the U.S. Department of Education's College Scorecard. They reflect actual federal tax-reported income of all graduates 10 years after enrollment — including those who pursued graduate school and those who took industry jobs. They are not survey-based.
Are these salaries adjusted for cost of living?
No. These are raw federal earnings figures. California salaries should be considered in context of local cost of living. For example, $90,000 in California has different purchasing power than $90,000 in North Carolina.