Criminal Justice at Rasmussen University-Minnesota

St. Cloud, MN · Private for-profit · Bachelor's Degree · Criminal Justice and Corrections
51 /100
DegreeOutlook Score (Base Case)
51
Optimistic
51
Base Case
40
Pessimistic
Earnings $39,317/yr (2% vs median)
AI Risk Moderate (36% exposed)
Job Market Very Large (480,600 openings/yr)
ROI 11.1x earnings multiple
Ranked #331 of 629 Criminal Justice and Corrections programs

How AI Changes the Outlook

Three scenarios based on how aggressively AI disrupts the career paths available to Criminal Justice graduates.

Optimistic
No Disruption
Base Case
Gradual AI
Pessimistic
Aggressive AI
10-Year Earnings $482K $483K $451K
Earnings Multiple 11.0x 11.1x 10.3x
Probability of Field Employment 34% 32% 26%
DegreeOutlook Score 51 51 40

10-Year Earnings Projection

*Year 1 uses actual reported earnings. Scenarios diverge as AI impact compounds over time.

4-Year Tuition (Sticker)
$43,596
Median Debt at Graduation
$29,236
8.9 months of Year 1 earnings
Reported Earnings (5 Year)
$45,036
15% growth from Year 1

About Rasmussen University-Minnesota

enrolling 8,033 students in St. Cloud, MN. With 51% of students on Pell Grants, the campus draws from a broad economic spectrum.

See all programs and financial aid at Rasmussen University-Minnesota →

Top Career Paths

Managers, all other $136,550/yr
First-line supervisors of police and detectives $105,980/yr
Detectives and criminal investigators $93,580/yr
View all 20 career paths with salary ranges and AI risk →

Compare & Explore

Criminal Justice at Other Schools

Other Majors at Rasmussen University-Minnesota

Consider the Trade Route?

Trade programs often mean less time in school, lower student debt, and hands-on career paths that tend to be more resilient to AI disruption.

Frequently Asked Questions

How does Rasmussen University-Minnesota's Criminal Justice program score?
A score of 51/100 reflects decent absolute metrics, but Rasmussen University-Minnesota trails the majority of Criminal Justice programs on relative rankings. Context matters more than the raw number.
Scores use College Scorecard earnings, BLS employment projections, and AI task-exposure research. See full methodology →