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MS abroad versus job in India after BTech—cost and long-term value?

BibhuPatnaikOdi11d ago
#ms-abroad#career-planning#post-btech
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8 replies0 views

Hey everyone, I'm a final-year BTech student (CSE) at a decent private college and I'm getting confused about my next step. I have two serious options: apply for MS in the US or Europe (probably aiming for mid-tier universities given my profile), or take a decent job offer in India (around 12-15 LPA). My parents are asking the hard questions about costs and ROI. MS will be expensive (25–35 lakhs total for 2 years), and I'm unsure if it's worth delaying my career. How do I think about this decision? Would love honest takes from people who've made this choice.

8 Replies

AaronPereiraGoa11d ago
I did my MS at a SUNY school in 2018 and honestly it was one of the best decisions I made. Yes, I paid ~30 lakhs out of pocket (some scholarships helped), but after graduation I got a job at 110K USD in New York. Within 3 years I'd paid back my loan and moved to 160K. Back then, my friends who took jobs at 10 LPA in India are now at maybe 30-35 LPA—that's a massive gap in absolute earnings. Factor in cost of living though: my rent is high, taxes are high. But for pure wealth accumulation? MS route won. Just make sure the university has decent placement stats and is in a good market (Bay Area, NYC, Boston).
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SouvikChatterjeeWes11d ago
Great question, and honestly there's no single 'right' answer—it depends heavily on your goals. If you want to work in the US/Europe long-term, an MS is still a strong pathway because it gives you access to student visa pathways and employer sponsorship for work visas. If you're happy in India and want to build wealth quickly, taking a solid job now and upskilling on the job often pays off just as well. Think about where you want to be in 10 years, not just the next 2. Also, salaries in the US post-MS (even from mid-tier universities) often justify the cost within 4–5 years if you factor in career growth.
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MohammedKhanPan11d ago
OP here. Thanks everyone. This actually helps a lot. I think I needed to hear that both paths work and that it really comes down to what I want in life, not which is 'objectively better.' I'm going to reach out to alumni from the universities I'm applying to and ask them where they ended up. And I'm also going to seriously think about whether I actually *want* to live abroad or if I'm just chasing an idea.
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TejaReddyTel11d ago
Real talk: I took the job route in 2016 at 9.5 LPA, thought I'd do MS later. Seven years later, I'm a senior engineer at 1.2 Cr CTC in India and never did the MS—the job learning was enough. Could I have earned more abroad? Maybe. But I have less debt, less pressure, and I'm living comfortably in India. Everyone's situation is different. What matters is your risk tolerance and lifestyle goals, not just the spreadsheet.
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MuktaPatilMah11d ago
One thing nobody mentions: if you go the job route now, you can always do an MS in 3–4 years with your company's education benefits or while working part-time. But doing MS first and then job hunting is pretty standard. I'd lean MS if you can get into a university where STEM OPT (the work visa extension) is strong, because that buys you time to find a job without panic. Honestly, the real question is: do you genuinely want to move abroad, or are you doing it because it feels like the 'elite' choice?
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VatsalDesaiGuj11d ago
From an academic mentorship angle: an MS abroad gives you exposure to different teaching methods, research culture, and networking that's genuinely valuable for your intellectual growth—beyond just salary. That said, it's not free growth. If you take a job at a good Indian company (TCS, Flipkart, PhonePe, etc.) and are disciplined about learning, you can get similar skills faster and cheaper. The hidden cost of MS is also 2 years of opportunity cost in career growth and seniority.
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ElenaPereiraGoa11d ago
Our son is in a similar position. We've decided that if the university is ranked in the top 100–150 globally and is in a tech-friendly city, we'll support the MS. Otherwise, we'd rather he works and gains experience first. A mid-tier, non-tech-hub MS in Europe might cost 20 lakhs but not lead to strong placements—in that case, Indian job + upskilling later makes more sense financially. What universities are you looking at?
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MeenaKrishnanTam11d ago
Hey, thanks for posting this. I'm in the exact same boat—got offers from both sides. My concern is: what if I spend 30 lakhs on MS and end up coming back to India anyway because visa situation gets tight? Or what if I take a job now, get comfortable, and regret not going abroad when I had the chance? The FOMO is real lol.
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