Georgia Institute of Technology-Main Campus
- 225 North Ave Atlanta, GA 30332-0530
- (404) 894-2000
- Visit website
- Programs offered: 13
Source:IPEDSCollege Scorecard
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Key takeaway: Yes, you can earn an accredited technology degree online, and the diploma is identical to an on-campus one. When the program is accredited, the curriculum and degree are the same regardless of delivery format, and the diploma never says "online." Always confirm accreditation before you enroll.
The most important thing to verify is accreditation, not delivery format. For the full picture, see our guide to technology accreditation.
Yes, and accreditation works the same online as on campus. Look for a program accredited by ABET, through its Computing Accreditation Commission, for many information technology programs, alongside institutional accreditation. Vendor and industry certifications can supplement an accredited IT degree but do not replace institutional accreditation. To confirm a program is legitimately accredited, check the U.S. Department of Education Database of Accredited Postsecondary Institutions and CHEA, and verify the program appears as currently accredited rather than a candidate.
Yes. Technology programs in cloud computing, networking, and systems administration are delivered fully online using virtual labs and remote sandbox environments that replicate real infrastructure. For more on how courses are delivered, see online technology course formats and compare online vs on-campus technology.
Accredited online technology programs offer the same specializations as their on-campus counterparts, including cloud computing, information systems, network administration, and web development. Explore the full set on our technology concentrations page, or start with the online bachelor’s in technology.
Compare accredited schools offering online technology programs below. Evaluate each on the factors that predict outcomes: accreditation, cost, graduation rate, and salary outcome.
Every school list on this site is ordered by the BOC Score, computed from the most recent school-level data published by the U.S. Department of Education (College Scorecard and IPEDS). To qualify, a school must be currently operating and accredited by an agency recognized by the U.S. Department of Education. Each eligible school is then scored on five measures, percentile-ranked against schools at the same credential level:
Schools without enough outcome data appear after ranked schools, without a score. Advertising never affects these rankings. Read the full methodology.
Source:IPEDSCollege Scorecard
Source:IPEDSCollege Scorecard
Source:IPEDSCollege Scorecard
Source:IPEDSCollege Scorecard
Source:IPEDSCollege Scorecard
Source:IPEDSCollege Scorecard
Source:IPEDSCollege Scorecard
Source:IPEDSCollege Scorecard
Online technology degrees often cost less in total than on-campus equivalents because you avoid housing, commuting, and relocation, and many public universities charge flat online rates. Compare programs using net price rather than sticker tuition. For lower-cost options, see affordable technology programs.
For most students, yes, when the program is accredited. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, technology graduates earn a median of $61,860 to $175,140 per year depending on specialization (BLS, 2024). The return depends on the accredited credential, not the delivery format. For a full ROI breakdown, see is a technology degree worth it?.
Yes, when accredited. Technology is not a licensed field; employers value hands-on skills, certifications, and an accredited degree. Many online programs build certification preparation directly into the curriculum.
Bottom line: You can earn an accredited technology degree online with the same recognition as an on-campus degree. Confirm accreditation first, compare programs on cost and outcomes, and choose the specialization that fits your goals.
Yes. Technology programs in cloud computing, networking, and systems administration are delivered fully online using virtual labs and remote sandbox environments that replicate real infrastructure.
Yes. Look for a program accredited by ABET, through its Computing Accreditation Commission, for many information technology programs, alongside institutional accreditation. Vendor and industry certifications can supplement an accredited IT degree but do not replace institutional accreditation. Verify accreditation through the U.S. Department of Education and CHEA before enrolling.
Yes, when accredited. Technology is not a licensed field; employers value hands-on skills, certifications, and an accredited degree. Many online programs build certification preparation directly into the curriculum.
No. An accredited online technology degree results in the same diploma and transcript as the on-campus version, and the delivery format is not noted.
For most students, yes, when the program is accredited. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, technology graduates earn a median of $61,860 to $175,140 per year depending on specialization (BLS, 2024). The return depends on the accredited credential, not the delivery format.
Data verified: June 16, 2026. Salary, employment, and tuition figures on this page are sourced from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS May 2025; Employment Projections 2024–2034) and the U.S. Department of Education College Scorecard (2023 cohort). The source agency and data year are cited inline with every statistic.