Communications Graduate Salaries in New York
Federal earnings data for every New York 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 New York. 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 New York. Browse all New York 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.
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Frequently asked questions
What do Communications graduates earn in New York?
Earnings data is not yet available for Communications graduates in New York. Try our /search page to find programs in this state.
Which New York school has the highest Communications graduate salary?
Live data not yet available; check /search for New York 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. New York 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.