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Ranked: The 30 Highest-Paying Jobs in America

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Ranked: The 30 Highest-Paying Jobs in America

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Key Takeaways

  • Specialized medical roles account for 24 of America’s 30 highest-paying jobs.
  • Pediatric surgeons rank first, earning a mean annual wage of about $451,000.
  • Many of the highest-paying jobs are also rare, with several employing fewer than 10,000 people nationwide.

Want to earn more than $300,000 a year in America? The clearest path is still a highly specialized medical career.

This ranking of America’s highest-paying occupations uses Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data to compare mean annual wages and total U.S. employment across the country’s top-paid roles.

The results show how concentrated high pay is in healthcare. They also reveal another important pattern: many of America’s best-paid jobs are held by relatively small workforces, making them some of the rarest careers in the economy.

America’s Highest-Paying Jobs

The rankings below show the 30 highest-paying occupations in the U.S. based on mean annual wages, alongside total nationwide employment levels.

Rank Occupation Mean Annual Wage 2024 Total U.S. Employment Industry
1 Pediatric Surgeons $450.8K 1K Healthcare
2 Cardiologists $432.5K 18K Healthcare
3 Surgeons, All Other $371.3K 24K Healthcare
4 Orthopedic Surgeons(except Pediatric) $365.1K 14K Healthcare
5 Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons $360.2K 5K Healthcare
6 Radiologists $359.8K 26K Healthcare
7 Dermatologists $347.8K 10K Healthcare
8 Anesthesiologists $336.6K 42K Healthcare
9 Emergency Medicine Physicians $320.7K 34K Healthcare
10 Ophthalmologists (except Pediatric) $301.5K 12K Healthcare
11 Neurologists $286.3K 8K Healthcare
12 Obstetricians and Gynecologists $281.1K 20K Healthcare
13 Airline Pilots, Copilots,and Flight Engineers $280.6K 99K Aviation
14 Psychiatrists $269.1K 25K Healthcare
15 Pathologists $266.0K 12K Healthcare
16 Chief Executives $262.9K 212K Management
17 General Internal Medicine Physicians $262.7K 67K Healthcare
18 Athletes and SportsCompetitors $259.8K 14K Athletics
19 Prosthodontists $258.7K 760 Healthcare
20 Family Medicine Physicians $256.8K 108K Healthcare
21 Orthodontists $254.6K 5K Healthcare
22 Physicians, All Other $253.5K 315K Healthcare
23 Dentists, AllOther Specialists $246.5K 6K Healthcare
24 Nurse Anesthetists $231.7K 50K Healthcare
25 Pediatricians, General $222.3K 43K Healthcare
26 Dentists, General $196.1K 113K Healthcare
27 Computer and InformationSystems Managers $188.0K 646K Management
28 Lawyers $182.8K 748K Legal
29 Financial Managers $180.5K 819K Management
30 Architectural and Engineering Managers $175.7K 210K Management

Why Doctors Dominate America’s Highest-Paying Jobs

Healthcare’s dominance reflects a powerful mix of high barriers to entry, limited specialist supply, and steady demand for complex medical care.

Most of the highest-paying medical specialties require more than a decade of education and residency training, limiting the pipeline of qualified professionals. At the same time, America’s aging population is increasing demand for specialists in cardiology, radiology, oncology, and surgery.

As a result, highly specialized physicians command some of the largest salaries in the economy. Adding to this, the U.S. is projected to face a shortage of more than 141,000 physicians by 2038.

America’s Highest-Paying Jobs Are Also Among Its Rarest

Many of America’s top-paying professions employ surprisingly small numbers of workers nationwide.

For example, there are only about 1,000 pediatric surgeons across the U.S., despite the profession ranking first overall in pay. Several other elite medical specialties, including prosthodontists (760) and oral surgeons (5,000), also have relatively small workforces.

This scarcity helps explain why wages remain exceptionally high. Limited supply continues to collide with growing healthcare demand and an aging population with rising rates of chronic illness.

The Highest-Paying Jobs Outside Healthcare

Outside of healthcare, only a handful of roles break into the upper tier of U.S. pay, led by aviation and executive management.

Airline pilots, copilots, and flight engineers ($280.6K) rank among the country’s highest-paid workers as aviation faces persistent pilot shortages. Meanwhile, chief executives ($262.9K), financial managers ($180.5K), and architectural and engineering managers ($175.7K) command high salaries due to their leadership responsibilities and oversight of complex operations.

Will America’s Highest-Paying Jobs Change?

Despite rapid advances in AI and automation, many of America’s highest-paying jobs remain difficult to replace.

Specialized surgeons, anesthesiologists, and pilots operate in highly regulated environments that require years of hands-on training and real-time decision-making. These barriers continue to shield many elite professions from automation pressures reshaping other parts of the workforce.

At the same time, healthcare spending is forecast to grow faster than the broader economy through 2033, helping sustain strong demand and high salaries for specialized physicians.

Learn More on the Voronoi App

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