Private Medical SchoolDurham, NC

Duke University School of Medicine

Duke School of Medicine graduates carry below-average debt, and the school's three-year curriculum option can further reduce total borrowing.

$150K

Avg graduate debt

AAMC class of 2024

-$62K

vs. national avg

National avg $212K

69%

Grad with debt

of the class

$2,100

10-yr payoff /mo

post-residency est.

Repayment Scenarios for Duke Graduates

Based on $150,488 average debt · 3-year residency at $65K · then Internal Medicine attending at $310K. Use the calculator for your exact specialty.

Aggressive 10-year

$2,085/mo

Total paid: $250,228

Debt-free fastest. Best long-term net worth.

Highest monthly payments early in career.

PSLF (nonprofit/govt)

saves $36K

$2,395/mo

Residency: $353/mo

Total paid: $213,888 + balance forgiven

Lowest total cash paid for high-debt borrowers at nonprofits.

Requires 10 years qualifying employment. Tax-free forgiveness.

Income-Driven (IDR)

$2,395/mo

Payoff timeline: ~9 years

Lowest monthly payment. Best cash flow during residency.

Longer payoff than aggressive.

Model your exact situation

Pre-loaded with Duke's $150,488 average debt. Change specialty, salary, and strategy.

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How Duke's Debt Compares

Duke graduates leave medical school with an average of $150,488 in education debt — 29% below the national average of $212,341 for the class of 2024. This figure comes from the AAMC Medical School Admission Requirements (MSAR) database and reflects only graduates who borrowed — students who received full scholarships are excluded.

The private school national average for the class of 2024 was $227,839. Duke sits below that benchmark.

Roughly 31% of Duke graduates finished with no debt — through scholarships, family support, or in-state cost advantages. For the 69%who do borrow, loan strategy becomes one of the most consequential financial decisions of their career. The difference between choosing PSLF vs. aggressive payoff can easily be six figures over a physician's career.

Loan Strategy for Duke Graduates

If you plan to work at a nonprofit or academic medical center — which includes most major teaching hospitals — PSLF is worth modeling seriously. At $150,488 average debt, graduates pursuing PSLF would pay approximately $213,888 over 10 years before the remaining balance is forgiven tax-free. Compare that to $250,228 under aggressive payoff. That's a difference of $36,340 in total cash paid.

If you plan private practice or a high-income specialty without PSLF-qualifying employment, aggressive payoff or refinancing typically wins. Post-residency payments of ~$2,085/month for 10 years leaves you debt-free and maximizes long-term net worth.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average medical school debt at Duke?

According to AAMC data for the class of 2024, the average graduate indebtedness at Duke University School of Medicine was $150,488 among those who borrowed. This is 29% below the national average of $212,341.

What will my monthly student loan payment be after Duke?

On aggressive 10-year repayment with $150,488 in debt at 7.05% interest, you'd pay approximately $2,085/month post-residency. On an income-driven plan at an Internal Medicine salary, payments would be approximately $2,395/month. Use the MedDebt calculator to model your specific specialty.

Should Duke graduates pursue PSLF?

PSLF makes the most sense for Duke graduates who plan to work at nonprofit hospitals, academic medical centers, or government employers. At $150,488 average debt, PSLF can save approximately $36,340 compared to aggressive payoff — but requires 10 years of qualifying employment.

How does the 2026 federal loan cap affect Duke students?

Duke's average graduate debt of $150,488 is below the new $200K federal cap effective July 1, 2026. Most students should still be able to finance their education entirely with federal loans and retain access to PSLF and IDR programs.

Debt data sourced from AAMC MSAR, class of 2024. Repayment estimates based on average debt, 3-year IM residency, $310K attending salary. Individual results vary. Not financial advice.

Student-reported data

What did Duke graduates actually borrow?

AAMC official avg

$150K

Student-reported

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