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FinToolSuite
Updated April 20, 2026 · Planning · Educational use only ·

Bootcamp vs Degree Calculator

Which route pays off sooner?

Compare bootcamp vs degree financially — total earned and net income across 15+ years using your own salary and tuition assumptions.

What this tool does

This tool compares the financial outcome of pursuing a bootcamp versus a traditional degree over a defined timeframe. You input the total cost and duration for each path, along with the starting salary each typically leads to, plus how many years you want to project forward. The calculator then estimates net earnings for both routes by subtracting upfront costs from cumulative salary over your chosen period, accounting for the time spent in training. The result shows which path generates higher net earnings in your scenario and by how much. The comparison assumes starting salaries remain flat and does not factor in career progression, salary growth, or differences in long-term earning potential between the two routes. Results are illustrative and reflect only the financial inputs you provide.


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Formula Used
Bootcamp: starting salary × years - cost
Degree: starting salary × (years - study years) - cost

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Disclaimer

Results are estimates for educational purposes only. They do not constitute financial advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.

A 3-month coding bootcamp costs 5,000-15,000 and leads to starting salaries of 30,000-55,000. A 3-4 year computer science degree costs 27,000-60,000 in tuition plus 3-4 years of foregone earnings, and leads to starting salaries of 30,000-45,000. On pure financial grounds, bootcamps often win big.

This calculator lays out both paths. A 10,000 bootcamp leading to a 40,000 starting salary vs a 40,000 degree leading to 38,000 starting salary, over 15 years of benefit, shows the bootcamp winning by roughly 140,000 - driven almost entirely by the foregone earnings during the degree.

The financial case doesn't tell the whole story. Degrees open doors to specific roles (research, academia, highly regulated industries) and confer broader learning. Bootcamps are narrower and often require more self-directed career development afterward. The tool shows pure financial difference - treat it as input to the decision, not the decision itself.

A worked example

Try the defaults: bootcamp total cost of 10,000, bootcamp duration of 3, bootcamp starting salary of 40,000, degree total cost of 40,000. The tool returns 202,500.00. You can adjust any input and the result updates as you type — no submit button, no reload. That's the real power here: seeing how sensitive the output is to one or two assumptions.

What moves the number most

The result responds to Bootcamp Total Cost, Bootcamp Duration, Bootcamp Starting Salary, Degree Total Cost, and Degree Duration. Two inputs usually tip the answer one way or the other. Identify which ones matter most by flipping each value past a round threshold and watching whether the option with the lower calculated total changes.

The formula behind this

Bootcamp net = starting salary × total years - bootcamp cost. Degree net = starting salary × (total years - degree years + bootcamp months/12) - degree cost. Difference = bootcamp net - degree net. Everything the calculator does is shown in the formula box below, so you can check the math against your own spreadsheet if you want.

Spreading the cost

Starting earlier always costs less per month than starting late. That's the main lever this tool surfaces. Whatever the total, dividing it by the months until the event gives a monthly target that's easier to build into a budget.

What this doesn't capture

Life events generate side costs the figure doesn't include: time off work, lost income, travel for others, aftercare. Add 10–15% to the direct number as a buffer; the items you haven't thought of usually fill most of it.

Example Scenario

Bootcamp: £10,000 + £40,000/yr vs Degree: £40,000 + £38,000/yr over 15 years years - diff is 202,500.00.

Inputs

Bootcamp Total Cost:£10,000
Bootcamp Duration:3 months
Bootcamp Starting Salary:£40,000
Degree Total Cost:£40,000
Degree Duration:4 years
Degree Starting Salary:£38,000
Time Horizon:15 years
Expected Result202,500.00

This example uses typical values for illustration. Adjust the inputs above to match a specific situation and see how the result changes.

Sources & Methodology

Methodology

Bootcamp net = starting salary × total years - bootcamp cost. Degree net = starting salary × (total years - degree years + bootcamp months/12) - degree cost. Difference = bootcamp net - degree net.

Frequently Asked Questions

Do bootcamps always win financially?
Not always, but usually over 10-20 year horizons. Degrees catch up on longer horizons if the salary growth rate is higher - this happens in specific fields (medicine, law, some engineering). For software development, bootcamp salaries compete directly with CS degree salaries, so the financial case for bootcamps is strongest there.
Does the tool account for career growth?
No. Both paths show only starting salaries, projected flat. In reality, both typically grow 3-6% annually. If degrees grow faster (more typical in regulated industries), they eventually overtake bootcamp earnings. Run the tool as a starting-point comparison, not a career forecast.
What about job market access?
Not counted, but significant. Some roles (investment banking, consulting, regulated industries) require a degree from specific institutions. Bootcamps rarely open those doors. For unrestricted tech roles, the path barely matters once you have 3-5 years of work experience.
Should young people still go to university?
Depends what they want to do. For broad education, specific regulated careers, academic aspirations, or fields where credentials matter - yes. For getting into software development as quickly as possible - often no. The calculation can't make that call; it just shows the financial side.

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