Career Outcomes and Salaries for Virginia MPA Graduates
Virginia occupies a uniquely advantageous position for MPA graduates. The state straddles three of the largest public-sector labor markets on the East Coast, and that geographic reality translates into measurably stronger career trajectories than what most states can offer.
Salary Trajectories After Graduation
Program-level earnings data for individual Virginia MPA programs are not yet available through federal reporting at the granular post-completion intervals (one year, two years, and four years out). As these figures are published in future Scorecard releases, publicadministrationpolicy.org will update this page so prospective students can compare concrete salary arcs across programs.
What we can say now is instructive. At the institutional level, Virginia Commonwealth University graduates across all programs report a median salary of roughly $58,100 within ten years of initial enrollment. MPA holders typically outpace that institutional median because the degree channels graduates into mid-career management roles in government and nonprofits, positions that carry structured pay scales with reliable step increases. For a broader look at earning potential by role, see our public administration salary guide. Federal General Schedule (GS) salaries for positions commonly filled by MPA graduates, such as program analysts (GS-11/12) and management analysts (GS-13), range from approximately $75,000 to over $110,000 in the D.C. metro locality pay area.
Where Virginia MPA Graduates Work
Three regional employment corridors dominate the hiring landscape:
- Northern Virginia and the D.C. metro: Home to dozens of federal agencies, government contractors, and policy organizations. Graduates frequently land roles at agencies like the Department of Homeland Security, the Office of Management and Budget, and USAID.
- Richmond: Virginia's capital houses state-level departments, the General Assembly's support agencies, and a growing nonprofit sector focused on health policy, housing, and criminal justice reform.
- Hampton Roads: Military installations including Naval Station Norfolk and Joint Base Langley-Eustis create demand for civilian administrators, logistics coordinators, and community development specialists.
Employment-share data at the program level, which would show exactly what percentage of graduates are working rather than pursuing additional education, has not yet been reported for Virginia's online MPA offerings. When that data becomes available, it will appear here.
Is an Online MPA Worth the Investment?
The return-on-investment question deserves a direct answer. VCU's in-state graduate tuition runs approximately $17,250 per year, meaning a 36-credit MPA can be completed for roughly $23,000 to $28,000 in tuition depending on pace. Institutional-level median graduate debt at VCU sits near $21,500, a figure that translates to modest monthly loan payments, typically under $250 on a standard ten-year repayment plan.
Compare that against even a conservative starting salary of $55,000 to $65,000 in Virginia's public sector, and the math tilts clearly in the degree's favor. The debt-to-earnings ratio stays well below the thresholds that federal guidelines consider problematic, and Virginia's concentration of government employers means MPA holders face less of the job-search friction that graduates in other states sometimes encounter. Prospective students weighing options in neighboring states may also want to explore online MPA programs in North Carolina for additional comparison points.
For working professionals already embedded in public agencies, the calculus is even more favorable. Many Virginia employers, especially federal and state agencies, offer tuition assistance programs that offset a substantial portion of the cost. When employer subsidies reduce out-of-pocket expense, the effective return on an MPA climbs higher still.