Combining an MLIS with a Doctoral Degree: Career Paths and What to Expect

A practical guide to PhD options, salary comparisons, and career trajectories for library science professionals considering doctoral study.

By Meredith SimmonsReviewed by MLIS Academic Advisory TeamUpdated July 14, 202624 min read
Library Science PhD Jobs & Careers for MLIS Graduates

What you’ll learn in this article…

  • 92 percent of ARL library deans hold a doctoral degree alongside their MLIS.
  • Doctoral library science faculty earn roughly double the median wage of practicing librarians.
  • R1 university employers increasingly cover full tuition for librarians pursuing doctorates.

The MLIS is the terminal professional degree for librarianship, sufficient for the vast majority of positions in academic, public, and special libraries. Yet a measurable subset of MLIS holders, roughly 8 to 12 percent of academic librarians at ARL institutions, go on to earn a doctorate.

Three motivations drive most of this decision: tenure-track faculty appointments in iSchools, senior administrative leadership at research libraries, and independent research careers in information science or digital humanities. Each pathway carries different admissions criteria, funding realities, and timelines that stretch from four to seven years beyond the master's.

Doctoral enrollment in library and information science has held roughly flat since 2018, while employer tuition benefits at R1 universities have expanded, shifting the cost calculus for working librarians considering a second credential. A recent Reddit discussion on r/librarians captures this shift well: a special and digital collections librarian at an R1 Graduate Education School noted that their employer offers tuition-free, tax-exempt degrees for field-related study, prompting them to explore dual MLIS degree combinations and Ed.D programs as a next step.1 For librarians weighing whether advanced credentials align with their goals, understanding what you can do with a library science degree provides useful grounding before committing to doctoral study.

When a PHD Is Worth It, and When Your MLIS Alone Suffices

The median salary for library deans at ARL member institutions in 2026 is $273,000, and 92 percent hold a doctoral degree in addition to an ALA-accredited master's. That single statistic captures the core value proposition of a PhD for library professionals: it unlocks a narrow but lucrative tier of leadership and academic positions, while remaining largely irrelevant for the majority of practitioner roles.

The MLIS Is Sufficient for Most Library Careers

If your career goals center on reference services, cataloging, circulation management, youth services, or branch leadership, your MLIS is the terminal credential. Public library directors, school librarians, and department heads in academic libraries routinely advance without a doctorate. Adding four to six years of doctoral coursework will not materially change your salary trajectory or promotion timeline in these roles. The opportunity cost is real: a librarian earning $60,000 annually foregoes roughly $360,000 in wages during a six-year PhD program, not counting lost retirement contributions and employer matches. If you are still weighing whether the degree is right for you at all, reviewing MLIS career strategies and job placement rates can help clarify whether a graduate credential alone meets your goals.

Three Career Lanes Where a Doctorate Changes Outcomes

A PhD or equivalent doctoral degree materially improves your prospects in three distinct pathways:

  • Library and information science faculty: Tenure-track teaching positions at ALA-accredited programs require a PhD in library science, information science, or a closely related field. Non-tenure lecturer roles occasionally accept candidates with an MLIS and extensive professional experience, but these positions carry lower salaries and less job security.
  • Senior academic library leadership: Deans and associate university librarians at research-intensive (R1) institutions increasingly expect doctoral credentials. While some AULs advance with an MLIS alone, the PhD signals research capacity and aligns with the faculty status many academic librarians hold. The academic library leadership career path offers a closer look at how dean-level roles are evolving at R1 institutions.
  • Cross-sector research roles: UX research, policy analysis, data science, and information architecture positions in tech, government, and consulting firms value the methodological training and publication record a PhD provides. Employers in these sectors often view the doctorate as equivalent to five years of specialized industry experience.

Opportunity Cost and Employer-Funded Programs

Beyond lost wages, doctoral candidates delay peak earning years and miss compounding growth on retirement accounts opened in their twenties and thirties. However, a growing number of R1 universities offer tuition-free doctoral programs to their own librarians, often with tax-free status if the degree relates to current job duties. Understanding employer tuition reimbursement for MLIS programs, including tax rules and negotiation strategies, can dramatically shift the return-on-investment calculus. We explore these arrangements in detail later in this guide.

Doctoral Degree Options for MLIS Holders

Choosing the right doctoral program means balancing your research interests, career goals, and the practical realities of time and funding. MLIS holders have more doctoral pathways than a traditional PhD in library and information science, and understanding the full landscape is essential before you commit three to five years to advanced study.

Start with Accredited Program Directories

Begin by consulting the American Library Association's list of accredited programs and the iSchools directory. These sources catalog relevant doctoral offerings and often include links to program websites, giving you a structured starting point. The ALA directory focuses on programs with strong library science foundations, while the iSchools consortium highlights information science and interdisciplinary programs that span technology, data science, and social informatics. Both directories help you identify which institutions align with your interests, whether that means user experience research, digital curation, or information policy. If you are still weighing foundational degree options, reviewing how to choose a library science program can clarify which academic priorities to carry into doctoral-level decisions.

Investigate Program Structure and Flexibility

For each program type you are considering, visit the university's official graduate program page to find typical duration (often three to five years) and whether a part-time or online option exists for working professionals. Ed.D programs are particularly popular among practicing librarians because they emphasize applied research and organizational leadership rather than purely theoretical scholarship. PhD programs in information science, often housed at iSchools, tend to focus on computational methods, human-computer interaction, and data analytics. Cross-disciplinary doctoral programs in digital humanities, public history, or education also attract MLIS graduates, especially those working in special collections, archives, or academic libraries.

Part-time and hybrid formats are increasingly common, allowing you to maintain your library position while you complete coursework and dissertation research. Online MLIS programs for working professionals have normalized flexible delivery models, and many doctoral programs now mirror those structures with online coursework, intensive summer residencies, and cohort models that reduce the need for full-time campus presence, though you should verify whether dissertation work can be conducted remotely.

Use Professional Associations for Curated Lists and Data

Leverage professional associations like ALISE (the Association for Library and Information Science Education) and the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook for librarians. ALISE maintains a directory of member institutions and often publishes reports on doctoral program trends, faculty research areas, and placement outcomes. The BLS Handbook provides salary data and employment projections for postsecondary teachers and librarians, helping you weigh the return on investment for a doctoral degree. For a closer look at how doctoral credentials affect compensation, salary negotiation for librarians offers context on how advanced degrees factor into pay conversations.

Contact Programs Directly for Current Information

Directly contact program coordinators or admissions offices to ask about completion timelines, cohort models, and flexibility for practitioners. This yields the most current, tailored information and allows you to gauge program culture, advising quality, and whether the faculty's research interests match your own. Ask whether the program has placed recent graduates in tenure-track positions, if you are aiming for academia, or in leadership roles in libraries, archives, or information organizations if your goal is practice-focused advancement. Reviewing academic library career progression patterns can help you frame those questions around realistic promotion trajectories.

Questions to Ask Yourself

Do you want to conduct original research and publish, or are you motivated by administrative advancement?
A PhD emphasizes scholarly publishing and advancing knowledge in the field, while an Ed.D or administrative track focuses on leadership skills. Knowing your core motivation helps you choose the right doctoral path and avoid years in a program misaligned with your goals.
Can you commit four to six years to doctoral study, or do you need a program designed for working professionals?
Traditional PhD programs often require full-time enrollment and may limit your ability to work. Ed.D and executive-format programs accommodate working librarians but may offer less research depth. Your career stage and financial obligations shape which format is realistic.
Does your current employer offer tuition benefits that would eliminate the biggest financial barrier?
Many R1 universities and large public library systems provide tuition remission for staff pursuing advanced degrees. If your employer covers costs, the financial calculus shifts dramatically, making a doctorate far more accessible than paying out of pocket.

Career Paths That Require or Prefer a Doctoral Degree

Tenure-track faculty positions demand a PhD, while administrative roles at research institutions increasingly favor doctoral credentials even when not formally required. The distinction matters: a library dean posting may list an MLIS as the minimum, yet competition from PhD holders makes the doctorate a de facto prerequisite at many R1 universities.

LIS Faculty and Teaching Roles

  • LIS Assistant Professor (Tenure-Track): Research and teach graduate students in accredited LIS programs, design curricula, and publish in peer-reviewed journals. A PhD in library and information science or a closely related field is required.1 The iSchools Organization confirms that tenure-track postings uniformly specify doctoral degrees.
  • Graduate-Level LIS Teaching Faculty: Instruct master's-level courses, mentor capstone projects, and contribute to departmental service. These positions require a PhD in information science, computer science, or a related discipline.3 Non-tenure-track lecturer roles occasionally accept MLIS-only candidates, but full faculty lines do not.

Senior Administrative and Leadership Positions

  • Library Dean or Associate University Librarian: Oversee strategic planning, manage budgets in the millions, negotiate consortial licenses, and represent the library to provosts and accreditation bodies. Postings technically accept an MLIS, yet research published by Johns Hopkins University Press shows that finalists at R1 institutions nearly always hold doctorates due to the competitive landscape and the expectation of scholarly engagement.3
  • Research Data Services Director: Design data management infrastructure, train faculty on FAIR principles, and secure grant funding for institutional repositories. A PhD is strongly preferred. A 2013-2014 national scan by the Council on Library and Information Resources found that 9 of 130 data-related library postings required a PhD or advanced degree, and an additional 57 accepted equivalent credentials, signaling that doctoral backgrounds are common in this emerging field.2

Specialized and Emerging Roles

  • digital asset management librarian: Partner with humanities and social science faculty to build digital exhibits, support text mining projects, and teach workshops on computational methods. A PhD is preferred.3 Postings for these roles increasingly note that candidates with subject doctorates bring disciplinary expertise that complements the MLIS credential.
  • UX Research Lead (Academic Libraries): Conduct usability testing, analyze patron behavior through ethnographic methods, and iterate on library website design. MLIS plus PhD combinations are welcomed, though not universally required.2 The dual degree signals both user-centered service training and rigorous research methodology. For a closer look at how MLIS skills translate into UX work, see whether an MLIS degree can land you a UX research job.
  • Information Policy Analyst: Advise government agencies or think tanks on open access mandates, copyright reform, and data privacy legislation. A PhD in information science or public policy is strongly preferred for roles that demand original policy research and testimony before legislative bodies. Open access librarian careers offer a related entry point for MLIS graduates interested in policy work.

Data science careers for librarians represent the fastest-growing segment where doctoral credentials provide a measurable advantage. As libraries become research partners rather than service units, the line between librarian and scholar continues to blur, and hiring committees respond by seeking candidates who can contribute to both the professional and academic missions of the institution.

PHD Vs. Mlis-Only Salaries: What the Data Shows

The table below draws on 2024 Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Two occupation categories serve as rough proxies: Librarians and Media Collections Specialists for MLIS-level roles, and Library Science Teachers, Postsecondary for doctoral-level roles. These are not exact MLIS-vs.-PhD buckets, so treat the comparison as directional rather than definitive. Notice that doctoral-level teaching positions pay a higher median but represent a much smaller slice of total employment, roughly 4,100 jobs nationwide compared to nearly 132,000 for the broader librarian category.

Occupation (BLS Proxy)Total Employment25th Percentile SalaryMedian Salary75th Percentile SalaryMean Salary
Librarians and Media Collections Specialists131,830$50,920$64,320$80,640$69,180
Library Science Teachers, Postsecondary4,100$62,130$78,630$97,020$84,320

The Doctoral Salary Premium at a Glance

How much more can MLIS holders earn by adding a doctoral degree? The comparison below uses national median and 75th-percentile wages from the Bureau of Labor Statistics to illustrate the gap between practicing librarians and postsecondary library science faculty, a role that typically requires a PhD or equivalent doctorate.

Median and 75th-percentile wages for librarians compared with postsecondary library science teachers in 2024, showing a doctoral salary premium of roughly $14,000 at the median

Tenure-Track and Faculty Positions: Requirements and Outlook

The promise of stability and autonomy in a tenure-track faculty role attracts many doctoral graduates, but placement rates and hiring trends vary widely by subfield and institution type. Understanding the current landscape requires piecing together information from multiple sources, since no single dataset tracks every LIS faculty opening or PhD job outcome.

What the Data Shows (and Hides)

The Association for Library and Information Science Education (ALISE) publishes an annual statistical report covering faculty, students, curriculum, and finances across its institutional members in the United States and Canada.1 Data collection occurs one year before publication, so the 2025 report reflects 2024 figures.1 These reports offer valuable snapshots of faculty demographics and program structure, but they do not publish PhD placement rates or counts of tenure-track positions filled each year.2 Similarly, the American Library Association's Library and Information Studies Education and Human Resource Utilization survey provides broader workforce trends but does not break out doctoral-level placement by job type.

For historical context, ALISE statistical reports from 1997 through 2002 remain accessible online through the University of North Carolina archive,3 and the 2004 ALA Making Diversity Count initiative cited ALISE data to map LIS faculty diversity.2 Program-level earnings, employment outcomes, and tenure-track success rates are not reported in these public documents.2

Finding Real-Time Placement Information

Individual LIS school websites often publish annual job placement reports listing graduates' first positions and sectors. Reviewing these reports across multiple programs gives a clearer picture of where new PhDs land. Real-time tenure-track postings appear on iSchool job boards, the JESSE listserv, ALA's JobLIST, the Association of Research Libraries (ARL) career site, and the Society of American Archivists' job board. Tracking announcements over several months reveals which subfields are hiring. For additional context on where MLIS alumni career paths lead before and after doctoral study, program placement pages are worth reading alongside these job boards.

Subfields with Momentum

Anecdotal evidence and position announcements suggest growing demand for faculty in data curation, digital humanities and health informatics, and related information science specializations. These areas intersect with well-funded research priorities and attract external grant support, making them attractive to hiring committees. By contrast, generalist LIS positions and traditional cataloging roles see fewer new lines opened each year.

Getting Informal Insights

The Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook offers national employment projections for librarians and archivists but does not separate tenure-track faculty from other roles. For nuanced guidance, reach out directly to LIS program directors, recent PhD graduates, or faculty hiring committee members. Many are willing to share informal observations about application volume, interview timelines, and the competitiveness of specific specializations. Early career tips for librarians from those who have navigated the academic job market can be especially practical during this stage.

Employer-Funded Doctoral Programs: A Growing Trend

Can working librarians pursue doctoral degrees without taking on significant debt?

For many library professionals at research institutions, the answer is increasingly yes. A recent discussion on Reddit's r/librarians community highlighted this growing opportunity: a special and digital collections librarian at an R1 Graduate Education School shared that they are considering Ed.D programs because their employer offers tuition-free degrees, with the added benefit of tax exemption when the degree relates to their field.1 This scenario illustrates a pathway that more librarians are discovering as they weigh doctoral study.

How Tuition Benefits Work at Research Universities

Many R1 universities extend tuition remission benefits to staff members pursuing graduate education. The University of Minnesota's Regents Tuition Benefit Program, for example, covers 75 percent of tuition for graduate study and includes thesis credits.2 The University of Maryland System offers tuition remission that applies across its member institutions, potentially giving library staff access to multiple doctoral programs.3 Similar benefits exist at UC Davis,4 UW-Madison,5 and other major research universities, though coverage details vary by institution and employment category.

These programs fundamentally change the librarian education cost breakdown for doctoral study. When tuition costs are removed or substantially reduced, the primary investment becomes time and energy rather than money. For librarians already working in academic settings, this can make a multi-year doctoral commitment far more feasible.

Important Limitations to Verify

Not all tuition benefits extend to doctoral-level study. Some programs cap coverage at the master's level. California's Public Library Staff Education Program, for instance, provides up to $5,000 per grant year specifically for MLIS degrees, not doctoral work.6 The University of Miami excludes certain programs including law, medicine, and online-only options from its tuition remission policy.7

Before planning a doctoral path around employer benefits, librarians should confirm several details:

  • Degree level coverage: Does the benefit apply to doctoral programs, or only master's degrees?
  • Program restrictions: Must you enroll at the employing institution, or can you use benefits elsewhere?
  • Professional doctorates: Are Ed.D or other applied doctorates included, given that MD, JD, and MBA programs are commonly excluded?8
  • Credit limits: Is there an annual or total cap on tuition support?

Beyond University Employment

Tuition support for doctoral study is not limited to university library staff. Union-negotiated benefits at some large public library systems include professional development funds that may cover advanced degrees. The University of Alberta, for example, ties tuition remission terms to collective agreements.9 Consortium arrangements between institutions sometimes allow cross-registration or shared tuition benefits.

Librarians considering doctoral study should explore all available funding sources: institutional benefits, union provisions, external fellowships, and MLIS scholarships and financial aid. At institutions like Rutgers10 and UW-Madison,5 graduate assistantships include tuition waivers, offering another route for those willing to take on teaching or research responsibilities alongside their studies.

The trend toward employer-funded doctoral education represents a meaningful shift in accessibility. For librarians positioned at institutions with strong tuition benefits, pursuing a PhD or Ed.D has become a practical possibility rather than a financial sacrifice. Understanding the skills for future librarians that doctoral credentials can unlock makes evaluating these programs all the more worthwhile.

Salary by State for Doctoral-Level Library Science Careers

The table below shows median annual salaries for Library Science Teachers, Postsecondary, the closest Bureau of Labor Statistics proxy for doctoral-level careers in library and information science. Data is drawn from the 2024 Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics survey. Note that several states report very small employment counts (under 100 total positions), which can push median figures higher or lower than they might be in a larger sample. The top-paying states, such as New Jersey and Ohio, cluster around $81,000 to $83,000, while states at the lower end of the range still report medians above $76,000, reflecting relatively narrow geographic variance for this occupation compared to many other fields.

StateTotal EmploymentMedian Salary25th Percentile75th Percentile
New Jersey130$82,800$64,970$105,870
Ohio50$81,190$70,570$93,830
Pennsylvania80$81,060$66,510$91,730
FloridaNot reported$80,480$63,560$81,030
Minnesota120$80,330$75,270$95,880
Indiana70$79,970$59,480$96,760
Utah70$79,880$59,260$83,200
Kansas50$79,830$59,500$79,830
Michigan90$79,830$66,790$83,700
Massachusetts100$79,740$46,730$96,430
Virginia100$79,530$66,180$100,840
Oregon50$78,820$66,010$92,240
North Carolina270$77,390$61,430$88,170
Texas200$76,190$62,070$89,570
Illinois540$76,030$60,390$81,950

Tips for Applying to Doctoral Programs After Your MLIS

Doctoral admissions in library and information science operate differently from MLIS applications. Research fit, not GPA alone, drives PhD acceptance decisions in 2026.

Identify Faculty Advisors First

Before you draft a statement of purpose, identify two or three faculty members whose research aligns with your interests at each target program. Read their recent publications, check their lab pages, and note whether they are accepting new students. PhD admissions committees evaluate applicants through the lens of research mentorship, so you need to demonstrate that a specific faculty member can support your work. Reach out with a concise email explaining your research interests and asking if they will be taking students in the next cycle. Programs rarely admit candidates who cannot be matched with an active advisor.

Understand Funding Models

Most PhD programs in library and information science offer full tuition waivers and annual stipends in the range of $20,000 to $30,000, typically in exchange for teaching or research assistantships. Ed.D programs, by contrast, often require students to self-fund or rely on employer tuition reimbursement. If you are weighing a PhD versus an Ed.D, the funding structure should influence your decision. A fully funded PhD allows you to focus on research without accumulating debt, while an Ed.D may be faster if your employer covers tuition (as is increasingly common at R1 universities for library faculty). For a closer look at how program costs compare across degree types, an MLIS program tuition comparison can help you frame the financial picture before you apply.

Evaluate Format and Timeline

Some iSchool PhD programs offer hybrid or online tracks that accommodate working librarians who cannot relocate for four to six years. Ed.D programs typically run three to four years and are more likely to be cohort-based and evening-friendly. Be aware that prior coursework from your MLIS rarely transfers, so plan for a full doctoral curriculum regardless of your existing credentials. Reviewing how to choose an MLIS program early in the process can also sharpen your instincts for evaluating doctoral programs, since many of the same criteria apply.

Build Your Research Profile Before You Apply

Doctoral admissions favor candidates who have demonstrated research potential. Present at ACRL conferences or ALA Annual, publish case studies or literature reviews in practitioner journals such as *College & Research Libraries* or *portal*, and seek a faculty mentor at your current institution who can write a research-focused letter of recommendation. Joining library associations for MLIS students is a low-cost way to access conference opportunities and practitioner networks that strengthen your application. These activities signal that you are ready to transition from practitioner to scholar, and they strengthen your application far more than a perfect GRE score.

Frequently Asked Questions About MLIS to PHD Pathways

Deciding whether to pursue a doctoral degree after earning your MLIS raises plenty of practical questions. Below are answers to the most common ones, grounded in current labor data and the career paths outlined earlier in this guide.

What jobs can you get with a PhD in library science?
A PhD in library science opens doors to tenure-track faculty positions at universities, senior research roles, and leadership posts such as associate dean of libraries or director of digital scholarship. You may also qualify for positions in information policy, data science consulting, and government research agencies. As discussed earlier in this guide, many academic libraries now prefer or require a doctorate for positions that carry faculty status.
How much does a PhD in library science make?
Salaries vary by role and setting. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, postsecondary library science instructors earned a median annual wage above $75,000 as of recent data, while academic library directors at research universities can earn six figures. Our library science salary data breaks down doctoral-level earnings by role and state, showing a notable premium over positions requiring only an MLIS.
Is a PhD in library science worth it compared to an MLIS alone?
It depends on your career goals. If you want to teach at the university level, lead large-scale research projects, or hold a tenure-track appointment, a PhD is often essential. For most public, school, and many academic librarian roles, an ALA-accredited MLIS programs is sufficient. Weigh the time investment (typically four to seven years) and opportunity cost against the salary premium and career trajectories detailed in this guide.
Do you need a PhD to become a library science professor?
In nearly all cases, yes. Tenure-track faculty positions in library and information science programs require a doctoral degree. Some institutions accept a closely related doctorate, such as a PhD in information science or education, but an MLIS alone will not qualify you for a permanent teaching appointment. Adjunct or practitioner-instructor roles sometimes accept an MLIS combined with significant professional experience, though these positions are less common and rarely tenure-eligible.
How long does it take to get a PhD in library science after an MLIS?
Most PhD programs in library and information science take four to seven years beyond the master's degree, depending on whether you attend full time or part time. Coursework typically spans two to three years, followed by comprehensive exams and a dissertation. An Ed.D, which some MLIS holders choose instead, may be slightly shorter, often three to five years, particularly for working professionals who pursue it alongside employment.
What doctoral degrees can you pursue with an MLIS?
MLIS holders commonly pursue a PhD in Library and Information Science, but several alternative doctoral paths are viable. These include a PhD in Information Science, a Doctor of Education (Ed.D) with a focus on instructional technology or higher education, a PhD in Communication, or a PhD in a subject discipline such as History or English. As noted in a recent discussion on Reddit's r/librarians community, some special and digital collections librarians at R1 universities are exploring Ed.D programs, especially when their employer offers tuition-free degrees for field-related study.1

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