Top Ranked Programs
The University of Texas At Arlington's program mix is anchored in Health, with meaningful concentrations in Business at 15%, Engineering at 7%, and Arts at 3%. Nursing is the program combining the largest cohort scale with strong earnings — 3,249 graduates annually earning median earnings of $99,393 four years after enrollment. Across 54 programs serving roughly 8,415 students annually, 41 meet Azimuth's ranking threshold, and the distribution reflects a university oriented toward applied health, business, and engineering fields. The highest four-year earnings belong to Computer Science, where 230 graduates earn median earnings of $109,197, and Azimuth ranks the program #82 among nonprofit four-year institutions. Nursing follows with median earnings of $99,393, ranked #14 in the Azimuth coverage set, while The Information Science/Studies program graduates 235 students with median earnings of $78,953, ranked #25. Among the largest programs, Business Administration program graduates 401 students with median earnings of $62,978, and the The Biology, General program graduates 289 students earning $53,498. The College of Business offers several fast-track pathways — including an Accounting BBA/BS to Accounting MS Fast Track and a BBA/BS to STEM MBA Fast Track — per the curriculum page, signaling structured graduate-school pipelines for business students. Several of the University of Texas At Arlington's strongest programs are high-mobility pathways where graduates enter the workforce directly — particularly in engineering and business fields where four-year earnings reflect labor-market demand. Health-related programs, which dominate the degree mix, split between direct-to-workforce nursing and allied-health tracks and grad-school-dependent pathways where four-year earnings undercount lifetime trajectory. The College of Business supports applied research through named infrastructure including the Academy & Centers and the Research Incubator Seminar Series, per the department's research page. The [supply-demand map](/analysis/supply-demand-map-college-degrees/) provides context for how the institution's health-and-business-weighted portfolio aligns with national labor-market trends.