Forbes September 3, 2025
Lifestyle
To create our new ranking of America’s Top Colleges, we began with a list of thousands of U.S. colleges that educate undergraduates according to their Carnegie Classification—a higher education framework that categorizes institutions based on the types of degrees they offer, their research output and specialty focus. We chose doctoral research universities, master’s universities and colleges and baccalaureate colleges, as well as colleges that offered specialized programs in engineering, business and the arts.
We then evaluated the schools using data from two federal education databases—the Integrated Postsecondary Education Data System and College Scorecard. One important note: this year, the U.S. Department of Education did not update its College Scorecard in time for our ranking with new information on graduates’ salary and student debt. As a result, the 2026 Forbes Top Colleges ranking uses last year’s numbers, the most recently available, for those metrics. We also use data from the Seattle-based software and data company Payscale; the Washington, D.C.-based public policy think tank Third Way; the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics; and some Forbes lists. Schools that have announced plans to close and those with fewer than 300 undergraduates are excluded from consideration. We also excluded from the final 500 any school missing more than three of our metrics, as well as the five federal military academies—while they routinely perform well according to our measures, they operate very differently from the other institutions on our list.
We used earnings data from Payscale and College Scorecard to determine which colleges produced the highest-paid graduates. From Payscale, we looked at graduates’ median earnings three years and 20 years after graduation. From the College Scorecard, we pulled median earnings data for graduates six years and ten years after they first enrolled at an institution.
Neither data source is perfect. Payscale relies on self-reported survey data, which can result in skewed information—graduates that are employed and happy with their earnings may be more likely to respond. College Scorecard collects information only for those with federal student loans—not all graduates. We weighted each of the four income variables at 5%.
Two variables from College Scorecard help us measure the typical debt load for students at a given college. First, we multiplied the median federal loan debt per borrower by the percentage of students who take out federal student loans at the college—we call this the debt and percent borrowed index. Second, we looked at each college’s five-year repayment rate—which is the percentage of graduates who paid at least $1 toward their federal loan principal within five years of entering repayment. Both of these variables were weighted at 7.5% for a total of 15%.
We evaluate the colleges on our list using their six-year graduation rate in order to account for the outcomes of transfer students, part-time students, and other students who take time off for financial, health-related or other reasons. Ten percent of our scoring model uses the six-year graduation rate for all students, and another 5% is based on graduation rates for Pell Grant recipients, which is often used as a proxy for low-income student outcomes at a given institution. We indexed the Pell graduation rate with the proportion of Pell Grant recipients at each institution to reward colleges for enrolling and graduating a larger proportion of low-income students.
The Forbes American Leaders List is part of what sets our rankings apart. The list aims to gauge the leadership and entrepreneurial success of a college’s graduates. To do this, we count how many listmakers each school produced on the most recent Forbes 30 Under 30, Forbes 400, Richest Self-Made Women and Most Powerful Women lists. We also tally the undergraduate alma maters of members of the current President’s Cabinet, the Supreme Court, Congress and of sitting governors, as well as the most recent winners of the MacArthur Fellowship, Nobel Prize, Breakthrough Prize, Lasker Prize, Fields Prize, Academy Awards, Tony’s, NAACP Awards, Guggenheim Fellowship, Presidential Medals, and Pulitzer Prizes. This measure is weighted at 15%.
To give us a look at the return on students’—and parents’—investment at a given institution, Third Way produces a price-to-earnings premium for each college. Third Way calculates this number by dividing the total net price of obtaining a college degree by the post-enrollment earnings boost that students get compared to the typical salary of a high school graduate in their state. This variable is weighted at 10%. We also included a price-to-earnings premium for low-income students, weighted at 5%.
To account for student satisfaction, we calculated a three-year average retention rate using IPEDS data, which measures the percentage of students who choose to stay after their freshman year. This year, our rolling average captures retention rates in 2023, 2022 and 2021—the period when students returned to campuses after the Covid-19 shutdowns in 2020. This variable was weighted at 10%.
We used two measures to assess the academic performance of each college. First, we compiled the number of recent graduates of each college who have gone on to win Fulbright, Truman, Goldwater and Rhodes scholarships. Second, we used data from the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics to determine the average number of alumni at a given college who earned a Ph.D. over the last three years, weighted by the college’s enrollment. Each measure is weighted at 5%.
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