Grand Canyon University vs Herzing University-Kenosha

Torn between these two? Here's how they stack up on what actually matters - what you'll pay, what graduates earn, and which one gives you the better return - all on U.S. Department of Education data.

Too close to call - both schools are within 3 points

Data: 2024-25 College Scorecard release

ROI Score Comparison

Grand Canyon UniversityPrivate For-Profit - Phoenix, AZ
25
Poor Value
Earnings
16(0.08x)
Payback
17(32 yr)
Debt/Earn
48(0.61)
Completion
27(44%)
Repayment
26(65%)
Herzing University-KenoshaPrivate Nonprofit - Kenosha, WI
23
Poor Value
Earnings
9(0.02x)
Payback
9(121.7 yr)
Debt/Earn
26(0.71)
Completion
82(72%)
Repayment
6(45%)

The Financial Comparison

Good news if you're stuck between them: Grand Canyon University and Herzing University-Kenosha come out about even on financial return. Grand Canyon University scores 25/100 and Herzing University-Kenosha scores 23/100 - close enough that your own situation (your major, the aid package each one offers you, in-state vs out-of-state) will matter more than the score gap.

Start with what you'd actually pay. After aid, Grand Canyon University runs $22,472 a year against $23,066 at Herzing University-Kenosha - $594 more a year, or about $2,376 across four years.

Then look at what that buys. Ten years after enrollment, Grand Canyon University graduates earn a median $42,186 against $36,909 at Herzing University-Kenosha. The cost earns itself back in 32 years at Grand Canyon University and 121.7 years at Herzing University-Kenosha.

Finally, the debt you'd carry out. Graduates leave Herzing University-Kenosha owing a median $21,500 versus $22,114 at Grand Canyon University. Their debt-to-earnings ratios are 0.61 and 0.71 - and the rule of thumb is to keep that under 1.0, meaning debt no bigger than a first year's pay.

Head-to-Head Numbers

MetricGrand Canyon UniversityHerzing University-Kenosh...
Cost
In-State Tuition$17,850$13,450
Out-of-State Tuition$17,850$13,450
Net Price (avg)$22,472$23,066
Total 4-Year Cost$89,888$92,264
Outcomes
Median Earnings (6yr)$36,000$30,100
Median Earnings (10yr)$42,186$36,909
Graduation Rate43.5%72.2%
Payback Period32 yr121.7 yr
Debt
Median Debt$22,114$21,500
Monthly Payment$234$228
Debt-to-Earnings0.610.71
3yr Repayment Rate64.8%45.2%
5yr Repayment Rate35.9%32.6%
Admissions
Acceptance Rate78.9%92.0%
Enrollment73,371522

Net Price by Family Income

Average annual net price after grants and scholarships, by household income bracket.

Family IncomeGrand Canyon Univers...Herzing University-K...
$0-$30,000$18,557$21,600
$30,001-$48,000$18,763$25,283
$48,001-$75,000$21,712$24,333
$75,001-$110,000$24,471$24,103
$110,001+$25,701$28,132

Earnings by Major - Head to Head

Median earnings for majors offered at both schools. Green highlights the higher figure.

MajorGrand Canyon Univers...Herzing University-K...
Registered Nursing$103,884$91,010
Computer Programming$52,190$78,404
Criminal Justice and Corrections$55,600$69,601
Accounting$67,067$54,345
Business Administration, Management, and Operations$65,828$66,379
Health and Medical Administrative Services$60,328$51,098

ROI Sub-Score Breakdown

ComponentGrand Canyon Univers...Herzing University-K...
Earnings Premium (30%)169
Payback Period (25%)179
Debt / Earnings (20%)4826
Completion Rate (15%)2782
Repayment Rate (10%)266
Overall ROI Score2523
Poor Value

The Verdict

It's close. Grand Canyon University edges out Herzing University-Kenosha by 2 points (25 vs 23), but that's slim enough that your major and your own aid offers will decide this more than the ROI score does. Run your actual numbers in the calculator below before you call it.

Want to personalize these numbers?

The ROI calculator lets you plug in your financial aid, intended major, and living situation for a tailored comparison.

25

Grand Canyon University

Poor Value - Full profile and breakdown

23

Herzing University-Kenosha

Poor Value - Full profile and breakdown

Data from the U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard, as of 2024-2025. Earnings are measured 6 and 10 years after enrollment. Net prices reflect average aid for first-time, full-time students.See full methodology.