New data from the U.S. Department of Education offers a comprehensive look at law graduate debt levels and first-year earnings—a new tool that can help aspiring lawyers get an idea of the costs of law school and their probable earning potential upon leaving campus. For those interested in the Golden State, we've got the debt-to-earnings ratios for the 21 law schools in California accredited by the American Bar Association. The numbers are based on the median amount of money their graduates took out in federal loans in 2015 and 2016, as well as their median earnings in their first year of repayment. At all but one campus, graduates on average made less right out of law school than they borrowed to finance their legal educations. (The figures don't include any undergraduate debt.) At the other 19 schools, graduates borrowed more than they made initially. That's generally on par with legal education as a whole, where median debt exceeded first-year earnings at 94% of law schools. At seven schools in the state, median debt loads were three times or more than average starting salaries. Click through to find out more about the debt-to-earnings ratios at these California schools, as we work up to the campus that offers the biggest bang for the buck.