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Is Pharmacy Financially Worth it? Probably not.
If you have to take out 150-200k loans? Definitely not.
I know quite a few of you are considering expensive private schools and taking out huge loans to go to pharmacy school.
Here is a my attempt to show you why it is not a great idea.
To preface, I'm not married and have no kids.
I take home about 5300 a month after taxes and retirement savings in a state with no income tax, not alot compared to some of the guys on the forum. I guess I could work PRN, print fake t-shirts, or sell MLM tupperware like some of my techs if I really wanted extra money, but I don't have enough HUSTLE.
Whatever, I guess I'm a pretty average person, and this take home pay is livable for now; I'll assume you the reader are average as well.
My friends in college pursued fields like engineering or comp sci, while I took to science. Biology was my favorite, I like living things, always have.
Pharmacy seemed like a perfect fit: make great money, help people, dont deal with blood? I'm in!
Now I always see people post about 150k-200k loans and how insane it is to go to pharmacy school with that much in loans.
These people, like pharmacy is a scam? They are trolls. I sometimes browse through this forum for fun, and almost every thread has an unrelated post telling people not to pursue pharmacy. Our instinct on the internet is to ignore trolls. But they are also correct.
Once in a while you find small threads on here or reddit of people realizing they are in a huge mess with their loans.
How big of a mess are you in if you take out 150k-200k for pharmacy? Lets take a look.
Assuming you earn a similar salary to me and put 2000 in loans every month.
If you have 150k in debt at graduation.,
Paying 2000 a month, it will take 75 months to pay off, or 6.25 years.
At 200k in loans it will take 100 months to pay off, or 8.33 years.
So you will have 3300 per month to live on for 6-8 years. not bad I guess,
But like I told my coworker who got a 72 month car loan, 72 months is a LONG TIME.
But wait, going back to my friends who did Computer Science. They all started out with salaries around 60k (my friends were average). Do you know what 60,000 after taxes is? Well, the online calculator I used says it is 1800 per paycheck or 3600 a month. So if you put 2000 a month towards your loans, for 6-8 years you will take home less than the base engineering salary.
Now wait, their degrees weren't free either, lets say it cost them 40k to get their degrees (5k a semester was about right for how much my public school cost) When would it financially "worth it" to be a pharmacist than an engineer?
I calculated this by putting -40000 and -150000 into a spreadsheet, and adding 3600 and 5300 to each until the pharmacy number overtook engineering. I found that it takes about 66 months, or 5.5 years.
5.5 years for pharmacy to be more worth it, and 6-8 years+ for your loan to be payed off! wow! I guess you could pay more than the 2000/month I suggested but this seemed like a reasonable number to me.
You know what I left out? these calculations don't even include state taxes, interest on the loans, paycuts, reduced hours, or any other garbage I'm missing which will surely increase the amount of time it takes for pharmacy to be more worth it, possibly dramatically. welp, may the odds be ever in your favor, or whatever.
This also isn't counting the fact that its faster to get a engineering degree so they start earning sooner, investments, the time-value of money, or the fact that the engineering salary will most certainly increase at a faster rate than the pharmacist salary.
Yup, their salaries can only go up, I know at least one of my college friends is making 85k now, probably close to 6 figures after he just got a new job, all with a bachelors degree. My friend is an admittedly average engineer. If you are truly blessed with CS talent, you could be making quite a bit more than that. How does that compare to pharmacy? you figure it out.
You know Chapman University? the one that people always rag on in this forum? Do you know how much it costs to go there? 8 trimesters of 26k. Thats at least 208k in pure tuition, without counting interest or any other ancillary fees. Good luck on your interview though!
Congratulations, you played yourself. You have spent 6+ years to get an expensive degree in a field that is getting worse by the day, and you are eating lunch on a stool in the pharmacy or making 45k as a resident. But at least you get to call yourself Dr. and you got to wear the fancy doctorate graduation robes, right?
Now with my post it might sound like I'm trying to convince you to do engineering. I'm not. No one knows the future. There's no guarantee I would have succeeded as an engineer. In an alternate future I might have failed diff-eq and flunked out of college altogether to become a nanny.
But to pre-pharms who ignore all the trolls, this is my semi-serious attempt to show you that financially, this field kind of sucks, especially compared with engineering, and with the dramatic downturn we've seen so far this year, it can only get worse. If you take out 150k-200k to go to an expensive pharmacy school, at this point you are setting yourself up for some serious pharmgrets.
P.S. Even when you find a job, you might end up having to move to the middle of nowhere.
My friends are all back home having board game nights and watching football games together.
I'm here alone fishing for likes and pondering the mysteries of life, such as when a category 1 CSP would ever be prepared in a cleanroom suite.
Whatever, I came into this field to help people, so consider yourself helped.
If you have to take out 150-200k loans? Definitely not.
I know quite a few of you are considering expensive private schools and taking out huge loans to go to pharmacy school.
Here is a my attempt to show you why it is not a great idea.
To preface, I'm not married and have no kids.
I take home about 5300 a month after taxes and retirement savings in a state with no income tax, not alot compared to some of the guys on the forum. I guess I could work PRN, print fake t-shirts, or sell MLM tupperware like some of my techs if I really wanted extra money, but I don't have enough HUSTLE.
Whatever, I guess I'm a pretty average person, and this take home pay is livable for now; I'll assume you the reader are average as well.
My friends in college pursued fields like engineering or comp sci, while I took to science. Biology was my favorite, I like living things, always have.
Pharmacy seemed like a perfect fit: make great money, help people, dont deal with blood? I'm in!
Now I always see people post about 150k-200k loans and how insane it is to go to pharmacy school with that much in loans.
These people, like pharmacy is a scam? They are trolls. I sometimes browse through this forum for fun, and almost every thread has an unrelated post telling people not to pursue pharmacy. Our instinct on the internet is to ignore trolls. But they are also correct.
Once in a while you find small threads on here or reddit of people realizing they are in a huge mess with their loans.
How big of a mess are you in if you take out 150k-200k for pharmacy? Lets take a look.
Assuming you earn a similar salary to me and put 2000 in loans every month.
If you have 150k in debt at graduation.,
Paying 2000 a month, it will take 75 months to pay off, or 6.25 years.
At 200k in loans it will take 100 months to pay off, or 8.33 years.
So you will have 3300 per month to live on for 6-8 years. not bad I guess,
But like I told my coworker who got a 72 month car loan, 72 months is a LONG TIME.
But wait, going back to my friends who did Computer Science. They all started out with salaries around 60k (my friends were average). Do you know what 60,000 after taxes is? Well, the online calculator I used says it is 1800 per paycheck or 3600 a month. So if you put 2000 a month towards your loans, for 6-8 years you will take home less than the base engineering salary.
Now wait, their degrees weren't free either, lets say it cost them 40k to get their degrees (5k a semester was about right for how much my public school cost) When would it financially "worth it" to be a pharmacist than an engineer?
I calculated this by putting -40000 and -150000 into a spreadsheet, and adding 3600 and 5300 to each until the pharmacy number overtook engineering. I found that it takes about 66 months, or 5.5 years.
5.5 years for pharmacy to be more worth it, and 6-8 years+ for your loan to be payed off! wow! I guess you could pay more than the 2000/month I suggested but this seemed like a reasonable number to me.
You know what I left out? these calculations don't even include state taxes, interest on the loans, paycuts, reduced hours, or any other garbage I'm missing which will surely increase the amount of time it takes for pharmacy to be more worth it, possibly dramatically. welp, may the odds be ever in your favor, or whatever.
This also isn't counting the fact that its faster to get a engineering degree so they start earning sooner, investments, the time-value of money, or the fact that the engineering salary will most certainly increase at a faster rate than the pharmacist salary.
Yup, their salaries can only go up, I know at least one of my college friends is making 85k now, probably close to 6 figures after he just got a new job, all with a bachelors degree. My friend is an admittedly average engineer. If you are truly blessed with CS talent, you could be making quite a bit more than that. How does that compare to pharmacy? you figure it out.
You know Chapman University? the one that people always rag on in this forum? Do you know how much it costs to go there? 8 trimesters of 26k. Thats at least 208k in pure tuition, without counting interest or any other ancillary fees. Good luck on your interview though!
Congratulations, you played yourself. You have spent 6+ years to get an expensive degree in a field that is getting worse by the day, and you are eating lunch on a stool in the pharmacy or making 45k as a resident. But at least you get to call yourself Dr. and you got to wear the fancy doctorate graduation robes, right?
Now with my post it might sound like I'm trying to convince you to do engineering. I'm not. No one knows the future. There's no guarantee I would have succeeded as an engineer. In an alternate future I might have failed diff-eq and flunked out of college altogether to become a nanny.
But to pre-pharms who ignore all the trolls, this is my semi-serious attempt to show you that financially, this field kind of sucks, especially compared with engineering, and with the dramatic downturn we've seen so far this year, it can only get worse. If you take out 150k-200k to go to an expensive pharmacy school, at this point you are setting yourself up for some serious pharmgrets.
P.S. Even when you find a job, you might end up having to move to the middle of nowhere.
My friends are all back home having board game nights and watching football games together.
I'm here alone fishing for likes and pondering the mysteries of life, such as when a category 1 CSP would ever be prepared in a cleanroom suite.
Whatever, I came into this field to help people, so consider yourself helped.