Ranking
Best Clinical/Medical Laboratory Science/Research and Allied Professions Colleges in New Mexico 2026
5 New Mexico colleges offering Clinical/Medical Laboratory Science/Research and Allied Professions, ranked by EduGradify value grade.
- Schools ranked
- 5
- Cheapest net price
- $4,868
- Top earnings 10y
- $44,792
- Public / Private
- 5 / 0
University of New Mexico-Gallup Campus
A+- ROI score
- 23.00
- Net price
- $4,868
- Earnings 10y
- $44,792
- Acceptance
- Open / not reported
University of New Mexico-Valencia County Campus
A+- ROI score
- 19.60
- Net price
- $5,714
- Earnings 10y
- $44,792
- Acceptance
- Open / not reported
New Mexico State University-Alamogordo
A- ROI score
- 13.25
- Net price
- $7,369
- Earnings 10y
- $39,067
- Acceptance
- Open / not reported
Western New Mexico University
A- ROI score
- 11.47
- Net price
- $8,522
- Earnings 10y
- $39,095
- Acceptance
- Open / not reported
University of New Mexico-Main Campus
C- ROI score
- 7.23
- Net price
- $15,489
- Earnings 10y
- $44,792
- Acceptance
- 95.2%
How we picked this list
This list starts with New Mexico schools with positive Clinical/Medical Laboratory Science/Research and Allied Professions program-share evidence, then sorts by EduGradify's school-wide ROI proxy: ten-year median earnings weighed against average net price. The set's average EduGradify ROI score is 14.91 (5 public, 0 private).
Every figure comes from the U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard. See our full methodology for the formulas.
FAQ
Who leads this ranking?
University of New Mexico-Gallup Campus in Gallup, NM tops this ranking. EduGradify value grade is A+.
How does EduGradify pick this list?
We rank this set by roi score using the U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard — see our methodology for the full formula. No paid placements, no surveys.
How many New Mexico colleges are in this list?
5 New Mexico colleges qualified for this ranking based on available federal data.
What does net price mean here?
Net price is what students actually pay after grants and scholarships — not the sticker price. It is reported by each college to the U.S. Department of Education.