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The business schools that offer the best bang for your buck

George Frey | Getty Images

There's a difference between the best business schools and the best value business schools — and since traditional MBA's cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, it's wise to consider the potential return on your investment.

In a recent report, online lender SoFi finds that while elite business schools such as Columbia and Wharton lead to higher average salaries, certain lesser-known programs offer better value when you factor in student debt.

One lesser-known program in particular gives you the best bang for your buck: Brigham Young University's Marriott School of Management in Provo, Utah.

The Marriott School offers students the highest salary relative to their debt load. Three years after graduating, students go on to earn an average of $109,383 a year and carry an average of $54,704 in student loans, putting their salary-to-debt ratio at 2.0.

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To put those numbers into perspective, the average salary for all business school graduates is $86,919, while the average student debt load is $70,164.

One of the reasons students from the Marriott School graduate with less debt is because it's among the most affordable MBA degrees out there.

Its tuition of $45,000 for the full two-year program is "about two and a half times less than that of top-tier MBA programs," SoFi explains in a press release. Yet graduates still go on to earn six figures.

What other programs offer sizable paychecks and a more manageable level of debt? Here is SoFi's ranking of the top 10 MBA programs by salary-to-debt ratio.



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