The old answer was simple: go to college. The new answer depends on who you are, where you live, what you can afford to wait for, and what kind of work fits your life.
This isn’t a case for one path over the other. It’s an honest side-by-side — cost, time, debt, stigma, and the stuff nobody puts in a brochure — especially for working adults in California where rent doesn’t wait and the four-year timeline is a luxury not everyone has.
The real cost comparison
Sticker prices are theater. What matters is what you actually pay, plus what you lose in wages while you’re studying.
Four-year public college (CSU)
- ~$7,000/year tuition × 4 = $28,000
- ~$15,000/year room, board, books, transportation × 4 = $60,000
- Sticker total: ~$88,000
- Federal aid and grants reduce this. Median CSU graduate still leaves with ~$20,000 in loans.
Four-year private college
- $55,000–$80,000/year all-in
- Median private-college debt for California graduates: $35,000–$55,000
Trade school (accredited, 9–24 months)
- Tuition typically $15,000–$30,000 total
- Federal aid, Cal Grants, and WIOA funding cover most or all of it for eligible students
- Living expenses during school: one to two years, not four
The debt picture isn’t close. And that’s before we talk about the four years of wages you don’t earn while in college.
Time to first paycheck
Time is the variable most college comparisons ignore.
- Four-year college: 4 years minimum. Often 5 or 6 for working adults.
- Trade school: 9–11 months for most programs. Some run 24 months for regulated fields like addiction counseling.
- Union apprenticeship: Day one (paid trainee wage).
Every year you’re not earning a full wage is a year of tuition, rent, and opportunity cost.
Who trade school is actually right for
Trade school is not a consolation prize. It’s a fit for specific kinds of people, and those people know who they are:
- Career changers in their 30s and 40s who need to start earning now.
- Working parents who can’t put life on hold for four years.
- People who hate sitting still. If a lecture hall makes you want to crawl out of your skin, a trade school lab will not.
- Anyone who already tried college and bounced out because the format didn’t fit.
- First-generation students without family money buffering the risk of a liberal arts degree.
- Veterans using GI Bill® benefits.
If you’re 18 and want to be a software engineer, doctor, or lawyer, college is still the move. If your situation is different, the calculus is different.
California-specific context
California punishes slow earning. A few numbers that matter:
- Median California rent in 2026: ~$2,400/month
- Median home price: ~$800,000
- Groceries, insurance, gas: among the highest in the country
You cannot wait four years for your first real paycheck in this state if you have rent to pay today. The trades are also relatively insulated from offshoring and, for now, from automation — you cannot wire a panel from India or ship a broken AC unit to an AI model.
The housing crisis that makes California hard to live in is the same force that makes construction trades relentlessly in demand.
Financial aid actually works for trade schools
A lot of people assume federal aid only applies to colleges. That’s wrong — at accredited schools with the right approvals, every major funding source applies.
- FAFSA covers Pell Grants and subsidized loans
- Cal Grants for California residents with qualifying programs
- WIOA (Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act) funding for dislocated or unemployed workers
- GI Bill® and other veterans benefits
- Employer tuition reimbursement from companies hiring in the trades
- Payment plans direct with the school
Verify the school has BPPE licensure and ACCET accreditation before you enroll. These are the marks that unlock federal aid.
What employers actually care about
Spend a day shadowing a hiring manager at an electrical contractor, HVAC shop, or medical office. Here’s what they care about, ranked:
- Can you show up on time, every day?
- Do you have the certifications the job requires?
- Can you do the work without constant supervision?
- Do you get along with customers and crew?
- What’s your track record of reliability?
Where you went to school is somewhere below that list. Skill, reliability, and the right license or certification open every door that matters.
The stigma question — honestly
The old bias: “Trade school is for people who couldn’t do college.”
It’s a line delivered mostly by people paying off their own student loans. The reality in 2026:
- Licensed journey-level electricians in California clear $80,000–$110,000/year.
- Commercial HVAC senior techs clear $85,000–$110,000/year.
- Skilled welders in specialty work pull $75,000–$95,000/year.
- The average liberal arts mid-career graduate earns roughly $55,000/year.
The stigma is pricing fiction, not reality. Trades are hard work and require real skill, knowledge, and discipline. The people doing them know what they’re doing. The people looking down on them mostly don’t.
Trades that out-earn many college degree jobs
Not exhaustive, but representative:
- Electrician (journey, California): $75k–$110k+
- HVAC commercial senior tech: $85k–$110k
- Plumber (journey): $70k–$95k
- Welder (skilled, code): $65k–$95k
- Elevator constructor: $95k–$130k (one of the highest-paying trades)
- Medical sonographer (allied health): $85k–$115k
Compare against liberal arts degrees at mid-career. The math is not ambiguous.
A voice from the field
“I got a B.A. in communications. I spent six years in jobs that paid $42k. I enrolled in HVAC at 31 with two kids. Eleven months later I was making $29 an hour. Nobody tells you this is an option until you’re already looking for it.” — Daniel Kaur, HVAC/R graduate, Orange campus
Frequently asked questions
Does financial aid actually apply to trade schools?
Yes, at accredited schools. Confirm the school holds BPPE licensure and ACCET accreditation. Those two together unlock federal aid, Cal Grants, and employer reimbursement programs.
Will I actually get a job after?
At reputable schools, placement rates run 85–95% within 90 days of graduation. Ask for the most recent reported number and ask how it’s calculated. A good school has this answer ready.
Can I work while I train?
Most programs offer evening tracks. Some have weekend options. Most students work at least part-time while enrolled.
What if I change my mind mid-program?
At schools offering multiple programs, credits often transfer between related tracks. Talk to admissions before you commit — they’ll walk you through the options.
Is this a good move in a recession?
Trades track construction, energy, housing, and healthcare. These are less volatile than tech and finance cycles. They don’t eliminate recessions, but they weather them better than most white-collar work.
How do I know a school is legitimate?
Three checks:
- BPPE license (California’s Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education)
- ACCET accreditation (or a comparable national accreditor)
- Published outcomes — placement rate, average starting wage, completion rate
Any school that dodges these questions is telling you something.