Overview
- Across all fields, about three in four graduates were employed four years after finishing, the median annual base contribution was €30,976, roughly 72–77% had permanent contracts, and 80% worked full time.
- Medicine led employability and pay at roughly 94% employed with average contributions near €41,839, yet only about 2% held permanent contracts due to sector-specific temporary arrangements.
- Informatics and technological engineering posted strong results with Informatics at 89.6% employed, over 90% in permanent full‑time roles, and a €36,732 average base, while leading engineering and IT degrees ranged from €35,444 to €38,248.
- Arts and Humanities showed the weakest outcomes with a 63.5% average Social Security affiliation rate and an average base contribution of €21,185, with degrees such as Fine Arts, Art History, Geography, and some languages at the bottom.
- A persistent gender gap remained as women had fewer permanent contracts (68.3% versus 78.7% for men) and contributed about €2,285 less on average, while private‑university graduates earned more on average (€33,990 versus €30,429) even as public‑university alumni showed slightly higher employability and permanence by year four.