These are the highest-paying college majors, 4 years after graduation—many pay over $100,000

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your college major can have a profound impact on your income.

Within four years of graduation, some majors stand to earn as much as $256,539, while others make less than $10,000 per year, according to a new report from The HEA Group, a research and higher education consulting firm.

The top-earning majors are in so-called STEM fields, or degrees in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Half of the top 10 majors with graduates making the most money are subsets of engineering.

Michael Itzkowitz, the founder and president of The HEA Group, analyzed data collected by the U.S. Department of Education from more than two million students who received federal financial aid and graduated in 2015 or 2016. Their earnings were measured in 2019 and 2020.

Here are the 10 highest-paying college majors, four years after graduation:

Nuclear engineering $131,454.00
Biomathematics, Bioinformatics, Computational Biology $116,918.00
Operations Research $112,097.00
Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering $109,121.00
Computer Science $104,799.00
Marine Transportation $103,626.00
Computer Engineering $99,063.00
Veterinary Medicine $97,533.00
Petroleum Engineering $96,957.00
Systems Engineering $95,224.00
Table: Morgan Smith
Source: The HEA Group, U.S. Department of Education

The majors with the highest earning potential tend to provide specialized, technical training in an in-demand field, like health care or technology, says Itzkowitz.

Nuclear engineering majors earn the most, with a median annual salary of $131,454. Increasing calls for clean, renewable energy has spurred demand for nuclear engineers amid challenges with wind and solar power.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/05/16/the-highest-paying-college-majors-4-years-after-graduation.html



These all have low ceilings though. Top out at 200-230K unless you move into a leadership role, and they will never see 7 figures unless they go to pre-IPO org. Engineers are hares in the race to success. But by the time they reach late 30's they are getting matched and outpaced by the English major who is Sr. Director of Marketing at Fortune 250


But only a few English majors will reach that level of success. Engineering is more of a sure thing, but not everyone can do it. It’s also a field biased towards males (no surprise).


you're wrong and misinformed. I know a woman who is CEO of a nonprofit. She is an english and women's studies major, with a salary of at least $400,000. I'm sure you are also someone who thinks that if you work in industries such as nonprofit, you are only going to make 60K as a CEO. People who are generally clueless should keep their opinions to themselves.

DP..

1. you don't understand statistics, clearly
2. most English majors who earn six figures also have graduate degrees. Engineering majors don't need graduate degrees to earn six figures.


DP Cite your source.
Also companies pay for Masters Degrees, PT MBA's, Executive MBA's, etc. So cost is a moot point.
Your point is fine, graduate with engineering make 6 figures. You can also graduate with English go to McKinsey make 6 figures. If the point is just to make 6 figures fine. But Engineers who cannot make eye contact while walking down a hallway will make six figures and top out. But the most ambitious folks, socially adept and also have brains are going to accelerate past that. I have a Psych degree and make 2-3x what my Mechanical Engineer friend makes and he has a Masters.


You sound smart but don't seem to understand that an exception doesn't make the rule. For every psych major making "2-3x" their mechE friend, there are a thousand engineers that make "2-3x" their mechE friends. Or did you think that just because you are successful, all psychology degree holders make "2-3x" their mechE friends?


You don't seem to understand corporations. I work in Biotech. We have FOUR THOUSAND Directors, Sr. Directors and VPs who make 2-3x what the engineers make.

dp.. and you don't seem to understand that ALL FOUR THOUSAND directors, SR Directors all have graduate degrees, whereas many engineers don't.

So once again... in order for English majors to earn six figures they need to spend $100K+ on graduate school to do so, whereas Engineering majors don't.


NO They Don't. Have you heard of TUITION REIMBURSEMENT? For anyone who WANTS a Graduate Degree, and not all of them want one or have one, some are straight BA Comms majors from UMASS Amherst, but if they do want one, the Company pays for it.
But keep living in your myopic bubble. Your kid will be fine making 175K Forever.
Anonymous
The English and Psych majors who responded here, in spite of their stated annual salaries are self-proven stupids. Signed adv degrees in ChE and MBA Finance.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your college major can have a profound impact on your income.

Within four years of graduation, some majors stand to earn as much as $256,539, while others make less than $10,000 per year, according to a new report from The HEA Group, a research and higher education consulting firm.

The top-earning majors are in so-called STEM fields, or degrees in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Half of the top 10 majors with graduates making the most money are subsets of engineering.

Michael Itzkowitz, the founder and president of The HEA Group, analyzed data collected by the U.S. Department of Education from more than two million students who received federal financial aid and graduated in 2015 or 2016. Their earnings were measured in 2019 and 2020.

Here are the 10 highest-paying college majors, four years after graduation:

Nuclear engineering $131,454.00
Biomathematics, Bioinformatics, Computational Biology $116,918.00
Operations Research $112,097.00
Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering $109,121.00
Computer Science $104,799.00
Marine Transportation $103,626.00
Computer Engineering $99,063.00
Veterinary Medicine $97,533.00
Petroleum Engineering $96,957.00
Systems Engineering $95,224.00
Table: Morgan Smith
Source: The HEA Group, U.S. Department of Education

The majors with the highest earning potential tend to provide specialized, technical training in an in-demand field, like health care or technology, says Itzkowitz.

Nuclear engineering majors earn the most, with a median annual salary of $131,454. Increasing calls for clean, renewable energy has spurred demand for nuclear engineers amid challenges with wind and solar power.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/05/16/the-highest-paying-college-majors-4-years-after-graduation.html



These all have low ceilings though. Top out at 200-230K unless you move into a leadership role, and they will never see 7 figures unless they go to pre-IPO org. Engineers are hares in the race to success. But by the time they reach late 30's they are getting matched and outpaced by the English major who is Sr. Director of Marketing at Fortune 250


But only a few English majors will reach that level of success. Engineering is more of a sure thing, but not everyone can do it. It’s also a field biased towards males (no surprise).


you're wrong and misinformed. I know a woman who is CEO of a nonprofit. She is an english and women's studies major, with a salary of at least $400,000. I'm sure you are also someone who thinks that if you work in industries such as nonprofit, you are only going to make 60K as a CEO. People who are generally clueless should keep their opinions to themselves.

DP..

1. you don't understand statistics, clearly
2. most English majors who earn six figures also have graduate degrees. Engineering majors don't need graduate degrees to earn six figures.


DP Cite your source.
Also companies pay for Masters Degrees, PT MBA's, Executive MBA's, etc. So cost is a moot point.
Your point is fine, graduate with engineering make 6 figures. You can also graduate with English go to McKinsey make 6 figures. If the point is just to make 6 figures fine. But Engineers who cannot make eye contact while walking down a hallway will make six figures and top out. But the most ambitious folks, socially adept and also have brains are going to accelerate past that. I have a Psych degree and make 2-3x what my Mechanical Engineer friend makes and he has a Masters.


You sound smart but don't seem to understand that an exception doesn't make the rule. For every psych major making "2-3x" their mechE friend, there are a thousand engineers that make "2-3x" their mechE friends. Or did you think that just because you are successful, all psychology degree holders make "2-3x" their mechE friends?


You don't seem to understand corporations. I work in Biotech. We have FOUR THOUSAND Directors, Sr. Directors and VPs who make 2-3x what the engineers make.

dp.. and you don't seem to understand that ALL FOUR THOUSAND directors, SR Directors all have graduate degrees, whereas many engineers don't.

So once again... in order for English majors to earn six figures they need to spend $100K+ on graduate school to do so, whereas Engineering majors don't.


NO They Don't. Have you heard of TUITION REIMBURSEMENT? For anyone who WANTS a Graduate Degree, and not all of them want one or have one, some are straight BA Comms majors from UMASS Amherst, but if they do want one, the Company pays for it.
But keep living in your myopic bubble. Your kid will be fine making 175K Forever.

LOL.. you think every MBA grad is getting tuition reimbursement? Cite your source.


I wasn't a STEM major, btw.
Anonymous
engineering and CS majors at my old college (Stonybrook) are like 95 percent Asian or Indian and 80 percent male.

Average well rounded HS kid are not welcome or encouraged.

I did engineering briefly StonyBrook but as a non Asian was not welcomed

Kinda like a male nurse

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your college major can have a profound impact on your income.

Within four years of graduation, some majors stand to earn as much as $256,539, while others make less than $10,000 per year, according to a new report from The HEA Group, a research and higher education consulting firm.

The top-earning majors are in so-called STEM fields, or degrees in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Half of the top 10 majors with graduates making the most money are subsets of engineering.

Michael Itzkowitz, the founder and president of The HEA Group, analyzed data collected by the U.S. Department of Education from more than two million students who received federal financial aid and graduated in 2015 or 2016. Their earnings were measured in 2019 and 2020.

Here are the 10 highest-paying college majors, four years after graduation:

Nuclear engineering $131,454.00
Biomathematics, Bioinformatics, Computational Biology $116,918.00
Operations Research $112,097.00
Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering $109,121.00
Computer Science $104,799.00
Marine Transportation $103,626.00
Computer Engineering $99,063.00
Veterinary Medicine $97,533.00
Petroleum Engineering $96,957.00
Systems Engineering $95,224.00
Table: Morgan Smith
Source: The HEA Group, U.S. Department of Education

The majors with the highest earning potential tend to provide specialized, technical training in an in-demand field, like health care or technology, says Itzkowitz.

Nuclear engineering majors earn the most, with a median annual salary of $131,454. Increasing calls for clean, renewable energy has spurred demand for nuclear engineers amid challenges with wind and solar power.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/05/16/the-highest-paying-college-majors-4-years-after-graduation.html



These all have low ceilings though. Top out at 200-230K unless you move into a leadership role, and they will never see 7 figures unless they go to pre-IPO org. Engineers are hares in the race to success. But by the time they reach late 30's they are getting matched and outpaced by the English major who is Sr. Director of Marketing at Fortune 250


But only a few English majors will reach that level of success. Engineering is more of a sure thing, but not everyone can do it. It’s also a field biased towards males (no surprise).


you're wrong and misinformed. I know a woman who is CEO of a nonprofit. She is an english and women's studies major, with a salary of at least $400,000. I'm sure you are also someone who thinks that if you work in industries such as nonprofit, you are only going to make 60K as a CEO. People who are generally clueless should keep their opinions to themselves.

DP..

1. you don't understand statistics, clearly
2. most English majors who earn six figures also have graduate degrees. Engineering majors don't need graduate degrees to earn six figures.


DP Cite your source.
Also companies pay for Masters Degrees, PT MBA's, Executive MBA's, etc. So cost is a moot point.
Your point is fine, graduate with engineering make 6 figures. You can also graduate with English go to McKinsey make 6 figures. If the point is just to make 6 figures fine. But Engineers who cannot make eye contact while walking down a hallway will make six figures and top out. But the most ambitious folks, socially adept and also have brains are going to accelerate past that. I have a Psych degree and make 2-3x what my Mechanical Engineer friend makes and he has a Masters.


You sound smart but don't seem to understand that an exception doesn't make the rule. For every psych major making "2-3x" their mechE friend, there are a thousand engineers that make "2-3x" their mechE friends. Or did you think that just because you are successful, all psychology degree holders make "2-3x" their mechE friends?


You don't seem to understand corporations. I work in Biotech. We have FOUR THOUSAND Directors, Sr. Directors and VPs who make 2-3x what the engineers make.

dp.. and you don't seem to understand that ALL FOUR THOUSAND directors, SR Directors all have graduate degrees, whereas many engineers don't.

So once again... in order for English majors to earn six figures they need to spend $100K+ on graduate school to do so, whereas Engineering majors don't.


NO They Don't. Have you heard of TUITION REIMBURSEMENT? For anyone who WANTS a Graduate Degree, and not all of them want one or have one, some are straight BA Comms majors from UMASS Amherst, but if they do want one, the Company pays for it.
But keep living in your myopic bubble. Your kid will be fine making 175K Forever.

LOL.. you think every MBA grad is getting tuition reimbursement? Cite your source.


I wasn't a STEM major, btw.


If you paid for your MBA, you're dumb for not being strategic. You're supposed to find your way into a Top Employer, and then they pay for Grad School. Everyone knows this. Why don't you?
https://fortune.com/education/articles/these-fortune-500-companies-will-help-pay-for-employees-mba/
https://www.bestcolleges.com/news/analysis/2021/09/16/top-companies-offering-tuition-reimbursement/
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The English and Psych majors who responded here, in spite of their stated annual salaries are self-proven stupids. Signed adv degrees in ChE and MBA Finance.


You've overpaid for your education
Anonymous
These sound like service academy majors, esp the naval stuff. Do it that way and you also get management experience post-grad, though a lower salary and much less control over where you go.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your college major can have a profound impact on your income.

Within four years of graduation, some majors stand to earn as much as $256,539, while others make less than $10,000 per year, according to a new report from The HEA Group, a research and higher education consulting firm.

The top-earning majors are in so-called STEM fields, or degrees in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Half of the top 10 majors with graduates making the most money are subsets of engineering.

Michael Itzkowitz, the founder and president of The HEA Group, analyzed data collected by the U.S. Department of Education from more than two million students who received federal financial aid and graduated in 2015 or 2016. Their earnings were measured in 2019 and 2020.

Here are the 10 highest-paying college majors, four years after graduation:

Nuclear engineering $131,454.00
Biomathematics, Bioinformatics, Computational Biology $116,918.00
Operations Research $112,097.00
Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering $109,121.00
Computer Science $104,799.00
Marine Transportation $103,626.00
Computer Engineering $99,063.00
Veterinary Medicine $97,533.00
Petroleum Engineering $96,957.00
Systems Engineering $95,224.00
Table: Morgan Smith
Source: The HEA Group, U.S. Department of Education

The majors with the highest earning potential tend to provide specialized, technical training in an in-demand field, like health care or technology, says Itzkowitz.

Nuclear engineering majors earn the most, with a median annual salary of $131,454. Increasing calls for clean, renewable energy has spurred demand for nuclear engineers amid challenges with wind and solar power.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/05/16/the-highest-paying-college-majors-4-years-after-graduation.html



These all have low ceilings though. Top out at 200-230K unless you move into a leadership role, and they will never see 7 figures unless they go to pre-IPO org. Engineers are hares in the race to success. But by the time they reach late 30's they are getting matched and outpaced by the English major who is Sr. Director of Marketing at Fortune 250


Which is pretty irrelevant as there are far more than 250 engineers out there and only 250 sr director of marketing positions in the Fortune 250, duh...
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your college major can have a profound impact on your income.

Within four years of graduation, some majors stand to earn as much as $256,539, while others make less than $10,000 per year, according to a new report from The HEA Group, a research and higher education consulting firm.

The top-earning majors are in so-called STEM fields, or degrees in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Half of the top 10 majors with graduates making the most money are subsets of engineering.

Michael Itzkowitz, the founder and president of The HEA Group, analyzed data collected by the U.S. Department of Education from more than two million students who received federal financial aid and graduated in 2015 or 2016. Their earnings were measured in 2019 and 2020.

Here are the 10 highest-paying college majors, four years after graduation:

Nuclear engineering $131,454.00
Biomathematics, Bioinformatics, Computational Biology $116,918.00
Operations Research $112,097.00
Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering $109,121.00
Computer Science $104,799.00
Marine Transportation $103,626.00
Computer Engineering $99,063.00
Veterinary Medicine $97,533.00
Petroleum Engineering $96,957.00
Systems Engineering $95,224.00
Table: Morgan Smith
Source: The HEA Group, U.S. Department of Education

The majors with the highest earning potential tend to provide specialized, technical training in an in-demand field, like health care or technology, says Itzkowitz.

Nuclear engineering majors earn the most, with a median annual salary of $131,454. Increasing calls for clean, renewable energy has spurred demand for nuclear engineers amid challenges with wind and solar power.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/05/16/the-highest-paying-college-majors-4-years-after-graduation.html



These all have low ceilings though. Top out at 200-230K unless you move into a leadership role, and they will never see 7 figures unless they go to pre-IPO org. Engineers are hares in the race to success. But by the time they reach late 30's they are getting matched and outpaced by the English major who is Sr. Director of Marketing at Fortune 250


Which is pretty irrelevant as there are far more than 250 engineers out there and only 250 sr director of marketing positions in the Fortune 250, duh...


What? LOL No. That's not how it works Agnes. There can be 80 Senior Directors of Marketing in a large company, there can be 20 VPs of Marketing in a Conglomerate like Danaher. If you do that math there are 50,000 Leadership Marketing Roles THAT MAKE MORE THAN YOUR ENGINEER. And 50,000 Finance Roles. 50,000 HR roles. 50,000 Account Management Roles, 50,000 Sales Roles 50,000 IT roles. That's a whole lot of people who make more than Engineers do, Agnes!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:engineering and CS majors at my old college (Stonybrook) are like 95 percent Asian or Indian and 80 percent male.

Average well rounded HS kid are not welcome or encouraged.

I did engineering briefly StonyBrook but as a non Asian was not welcomed

Kinda like a male nurse


Most of the Indian or Asian students you mention are American citizens but a dumb wit like you wouldn’t know that. For your info, an average well rounded HS kid will not survive in a rigorous curriculum like engineering. Such kids don’t apply to engineering programs in the first place and if some do, they will switch majors after the weed out courses.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Your college major can have a profound impact on your income.

Within four years of graduation, some majors stand to earn as much as $256,539, while others make less than $10,000 per year, according to a new report from The HEA Group, a research and higher education consulting firm.

The top-earning majors are in so-called STEM fields, or degrees in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Half of the top 10 majors with graduates making the most money are subsets of engineering.

Michael Itzkowitz, the founder and president of The HEA Group, analyzed data collected by the U.S. Department of Education from more than two million students who received federal financial aid and graduated in 2015 or 2016. Their earnings were measured in 2019 and 2020.

Here are the 10 highest-paying college majors, four years after graduation:

Nuclear engineering $131,454.00
Biomathematics, Bioinformatics, Computational Biology $116,918.00
Operations Research $112,097.00
Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering $109,121.00
Computer Science $104,799.00
Marine Transportation $103,626.00
Computer Engineering $99,063.00
Veterinary Medicine $97,533.00
Petroleum Engineering $96,957.00
Systems Engineering $95,224.00
Table: Morgan Smith
Source: The HEA Group, U.S. Department of Education

The majors with the highest earning potential tend to provide specialized, technical training in an in-demand field, like health care or technology, says Itzkowitz.

Nuclear engineering majors earn the most, with a median annual salary of $131,454. Increasing calls for clean, renewable energy has spurred demand for nuclear engineers amid challenges with wind and solar power.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/05/16/the-highest-paying-college-majors-4-years-after-graduation.html



These all have low ceilings though. Top out at 200-230K unless you move into a leadership role, and they will never see 7 figures unless they go to pre-IPO org. Engineers are hares in the race to success. But by the time they reach late 30's they are getting matched and outpaced by the English major who is Sr. Director of Marketing at Fortune 250


Which is pretty irrelevant as there are far more than 250 engineers out there and only 250 sr director of marketing positions in the Fortune 250, duh...


What? LOL No. That's not how it works Agnes. There can be 80 Senior Directors of Marketing in a large company, there can be 20 VPs of Marketing in a Conglomerate like Danaher. If you do that math there are 50,000 Leadership Marketing Roles THAT MAKE MORE THAN YOUR ENGINEER. And 50,000 Finance Roles. 50,000 HR roles. 50,000 Account Management Roles, 50,000 Sales Roles 50,000 IT roles. That's a whole lot of people who make more than Engineers do, Agnes!


All I can say is holy crap what you wrote. You seem to think there are no engineers in the roles you mention. Please tell us how many hundreds of thousands of English, Humanities, and Psych majors are there in the US. Of them how many do you think make over 100K per year by the age of 45. What percent will that constitute, if you are capable of doing simple math.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:engineering and CS majors at my old college (Stonybrook) are like 95 percent Asian or Indian and 80 percent male.

Average well rounded HS kid are not welcome or encouraged.

I did engineering briefly StonyBrook but as a non Asian was not welcomed

Kinda like a male nurse


Most of the Indian or Asian students you mention are American citizens but a dumb wit like you wouldn’t know that. For your info, an average well rounded HS kid will not survive in a rigorous curriculum like engineering. Such kids don’t apply to engineering programs in the first place and if some do, they will switch majors after the weed out courses.


DP. That wasn’t even the point. The point is race/ethnicity, and others aren’t welcomed. Females are often not welcomed. Not everyone can stick it out for an engineering degree, or even get admitted to the program. That said, people also shouldn’t go into an English major expecting to become a VP of a top company.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Your college major can have a profound impact on your income.

Within four years of graduation, some majors stand to earn as much as $256,539, while others make less than $10,000 per year, according to a new report from The HEA Group, a research and higher education consulting firm.

The top-earning majors are in so-called STEM fields, or degrees in science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Half of the top 10 majors with graduates making the most money are subsets of engineering.

Michael Itzkowitz, the founder and president of The HEA Group, analyzed data collected by the U.S. Department of Education from more than two million students who received federal financial aid and graduated in 2015 or 2016. Their earnings were measured in 2019 and 2020.

Here are the 10 highest-paying college majors, four years after graduation:

Nuclear engineering $131,454.00
Biomathematics, Bioinformatics, Computational Biology $116,918.00
Operations Research $112,097.00
Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering $109,121.00
Computer Science $104,799.00
Marine Transportation $103,626.00
Computer Engineering $99,063.00
Veterinary Medicine $97,533.00
Petroleum Engineering $96,957.00
Systems Engineering $95,224.00
Table: Morgan Smith
Source: The HEA Group, U.S. Department of Education

The majors with the highest earning potential tend to provide specialized, technical training in an in-demand field, like health care or technology, says Itzkowitz.

Nuclear engineering majors earn the most, with a median annual salary of $131,454. Increasing calls for clean, renewable energy has spurred demand for nuclear engineers amid challenges with wind and solar power.

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/05/16/the-highest-paying-college-majors-4-years-after-graduation.html


Vet school is super expensive. That is huge amount of dept to take on, only to make 97k
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:engineering and CS majors at my old college (Stonybrook) are like 95 percent Asian or Indian and 80 percent male.

Average well rounded HS kid are not welcome or encouraged.

I did engineering briefly StonyBrook but as a non Asian was not welcomed

Kinda like a male nurse


Most of the Indian or Asian students you mention are American citizens but a dumb wit like you wouldn’t know that. For your info, an average well rounded HS kid will not survive in a rigorous curriculum like engineering. Such kids don’t apply to engineering programs in the first place and if some do, they will switch majors after the weed out courses.


DP. That wasn’t even the point. The point is race/ethnicity, and others aren’t welcomed. Females are often not welcomed. Not everyone can stick it out for an engineering degree, or even get admitted to the program. That said, people also shouldn’t go into an English major expecting to become a VP of a top company.


I’ll put in a plug for Smith College, which has an ABET approved engineering program and is a women’s college. My daughter chose Smith specifically because she could not stand the condescending males in STEM. She wanted somewhere she could have equal footing and opportunity to learn and grow. It has worked out and she is ready to graduate with the confidence to ignore the male egos.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Same after 10+ years

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/02/20/highest-paying-college-majors.html

The college majors that pay the most for mid-career workers

Top 10 majors by median salary for graduates who are 35-45 years old
The table shows the top 10 college majors that pay the most for mid-career workers.

Chemical engineering $120K
Computer engineering $114K
Aerospace engineering $112K
Electrical engineering $109K
Computer science $105K
Mechanical engineering $105K
Miscellaneous physical sciences $104K
Industrial engineering $100K
Miscellaneous engineering $100K
Civil engineering $100K


And remember, folks, this is a list of undergrad degrees only. So, no need to post, "But I was an English major, and now I'm a lawyer earning 5x that much".


So the vet in the OP post didn't need grad school? And non of the engineers here got a masters?

most engineering majors don't need a graduate degree to earn six figures. Yes, engineering majors make more than English majors -- undergrad.

Look at the starting salary of engineering majors? It's already close to six figures. 10 years later, their salaries would hit above six figures. English majors generally need a graduate degree to make six figures.


But most engineers don't make much past those starting figures, unless they go on and get a law degree and go into Intellectual Property law.

They are static and don't have the dramatic upward trend seen in other fields.


+1
post reply Forum Index » College and University Discussion
Message Quick Reply
Go to: