There is absolutely NO shame in the trades, and honestly, I wish I had gone in to a trade now.
Having difficulty finding statistics that are consistent. Different sources seem to claim wildly different numbers. But, hunting around looking for averages, average cost of a 4 year degree for a state resident at a public looks to be about $35,000. Some sources claim the average is as low as $26,000, but it's possible that might be tuition only. Whereas the average trade school...most source seem to agree it's in the $30,000 range. So, costs are comparable, but your circumstances may vary. I note that a lot of articles promoting the value of trade school seem to like claiming that the average bachelor's degree costs ~$125,000, which doesn't seem to be corroborated by anyone who isn't trying to promote trade schools over college.
As for income, most site seem to agree the average bachelor's degree holder make about $45,000/yr. For vocational schools, I'm seeing "average income" numbers that range from as low as $30,000 to as high as $42,000. If we arbitrarily pick the middle of that range, $36,000/yr...
Would you rather:
* spend an average of $35,000 for four years of school in order to make an average of $45,000/yr
* Spend an average of $30,000 for two years of school in order to make an average of $36,000/yr
At first glance, college looks to be the better deal, but:
* the guy making $36,000/yr starts working two years sooner than the guy making $45,000/yr. It would take the college graduate
eight years to catch up and break even on that head start.
* 40% of people who start college drop out.
* Unemployment rates appear to be higher for college graduates than trade school graduates, and significant portions of employed college graduates are employed in minimum wage jobs. It would be fairly awful to accrue the debt, spend two years more and not be able to get a job at all, or to get a job and be making less than the guy who started working at mcdonald's four years ago and now has work experience.
* On the other hand, that $45,000/yr figure presumably includes the people making minimum wage, and a lot of those probably chose
stupid majors. So if you're not majoring in art appreciation or archeology or something, it might be reasonable to expect to get higher than that average.
Unfortunately this is probably a case where in the time it would take to get a degree, economic conditions might well change. What might seem a very safe and dependable choice now might not be two or four years from now.
I think, again, my advice would be...whatever you do, don't accrue debt. Make choices that suit your situation, but be prepared for the possibility that whatever you do, it might turn out to have been a bad choice due entirely to circumstances out of your control.
Another option: you could skip the whole college/tradeschool experience altogether and simply spend a couple hundred dollars to get a forklift cert, guard card, A+ or some other random certification and get a job immediately that pays $25,000/yr or so. I realize that must not seem very exciting compared to the $36,000 to $45,000/yr figures listed above, but no risk, no debt, and four years worth of work experience and raises by the time the guy with a degree has to start looking for a job to pay off his ten+ years worth of debt and interest.
As usual, this is your life, not ours, and you're the one who has to live with the consequences of your decisions, not us. Due diligence is advised.