Career Outcomes, Licensure Pathway, and Salary Context
Graduating from a COAMFTE-accredited program is one of the strongest foundations you can build for a successful career as a Licensed Marriage and Family Therapist (LMFT). Loma Linda University's MS and DMFT programs are both designed to meet California licensure requirements, which positions graduates to move directly into the post-degree supervised experience phase without needing to fill curricular gaps.12 Understanding what comes after graduation, and what earning potential looks like in your target market, helps you evaluate whether the investment makes sense.
The California LMFT Licensure Pathway
California's Board of Behavioral Sciences (BBS) requires aspiring LMFTs to complete a qualifying graduate degree, accumulate 3,000 hours of supervised professional experience (with specific sub-hour requirements for direct client contact), and pass two licensing examinations: the California Law and Ethics Exam and the national Marriage and Family Therapy examination administered through the AMFTRB. Because both the MS and DMFT at Loma Linda carry COAMFTE accreditation, the coursework is aligned with these regulatory standards.34 Graduates typically begin accruing supervised hours as Associate Marriage and Family Therapists (AMFTs) immediately after earning their degree.
For program-specific outcome data such as graduation rates, licensure exam pass rates, and employment rates, check Loma Linda University's MFT program website for a dedicated program outcomes or student achievement page. COAMFTE-accredited programs are expected to publish this data, and you can also find it through the COAMFTE program directory. If the numbers are not posted online, contact the program's administrative office directly. Do not rely on third-party aggregators that may be outdated.
Salary Context for the Inland Empire and California
To get the most current salary figures for Marriage and Family Therapists, visit the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS.gov) and search for the occupation under SOC code 21-1013. You can filter results by state to see California-specific median wages, which have historically run well above the national median for this profession. For an even more localized picture, look for the Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario metropolitan statistical area (MSA) within the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics tool. This MSA covers the communities closest to Loma Linda's campus and gives you a realistic baseline for what early-career and mid-career LMFTs earn in the Inland Empire.
Keep in mind that salary data varies by work setting. Therapists in private practice, hospital-integrated behavioral health programs, and school-based systems may see significantly different compensation. Doctoral-level graduates (DMFT holders) may qualify for supervisory, academic, or specialized clinical roles that carry higher earning ceilings.
Verifying Numbers Before You Commit
Because program-level outcome data and regional salary figures are updated on different cycles, treat any single number you encounter as a snapshot rather than a guarantee. Cross-reference multiple authoritative sources:
- BLS.gov: National and state-level wage and employment projections for MFTs.
- COAMFTE Program Directory: Accreditation status, linked outcome reports, and program contact information.
- AAMFT: National licensure exam pass-rate data and profession-wide workforce trends.
- California BBS: Current licensing requirements, fee schedules, and supervised-experience rules.
If you are comparing Loma Linda's outcomes against other programs, make sure you are looking at comparable cohort years and that data definitions match. Graduation rates calculated over different time windows, for instance, are not apples-to-apples. Browsing COAMFTE-accredited programs across institutions can help you benchmark outcomes and identify realistic comparison points.
Does the Investment Make Sense?
The strongest argument for a COAMFTE-accredited program in California is that the state has one of the largest and most active MFT labor markets in the country. Demand for licensed therapists in the Inland Empire has been fueled by population growth, expanded insurance parity laws, and integrated care models in the region's health systems. Loma Linda's proximity to its own medical center and affiliated clinics also creates a clinical training pipeline that can translate into employment connections after licensure.
That said, weigh tuition costs against realistic post-licensure earnings in your intended practice setting. Once you hold your LMFT license, you will also need to stay current with LMFT continuing education requirements by state. Reaching full licensure takes time, typically two or more years of supervised post-degree work at associate-level pay, before you access LMFT-level compensation. A clear-eyed look at the numbers, drawn from the sources above, will help you determine whether Loma Linda's program represents a sound return on your educational investment.