Salaries & Career Paths · 2025

The Highest-Earning Professions:
What They Pay & How to Get There

From the operating room to the trading floor — a data-grounded look at which careers sit at the top of the income ladder, and the education, training, and timelines required to reach them.

$400K+ Median surgeon
salary, U.S.
16 yrs Avg. training:
neurosurgeon
$220K Median big-law
partner salary
8–12 Most paths:
years of study

The relationship between income and education is rarely a straight line — but among the very highest-earning careers, it is almost always long. The professions listed here represent the top tier of lifetime earnings in the United States, based on Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment data and verified salary surveys from professional associations. Salaries reflect median total compensation including bonuses where applicable, not base salary alone.

What follows is not just a ranking. For each profession, we detail the specific training pathway, typical time commitments, competitive realities, and what early-career earners can realistically expect before reaching peak pay.

The Top TierHighest-Paying Careers in 2025

These eight professions consistently sit above the 99th income percentile in the United States. Each requires advanced credentials, extended training, and operates in regulated or highly specialized markets — which is precisely what sustains their earning power.

#1 Highest Paid
Neurosurgeon
Surgical subspecialty · Medicine
$620K
Training16 years post-HS
Degree RequiredMD + 7-yr residency + fellowship
Job Openings (2025)~800 nationally
Entry Salary$280K–$360K
#2
Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon
Dental subspecialty · Surgery
$490K
Training12–14 years post-HS
Degree RequiredDDS/DMD + 4-yr surgical residency
Job Openings (2025)~1,200 nationally
Entry Salary$240K–$310K
#3
Cardiologist
Internal medicine subspecialty · Interventional
$460K
Training14–16 years post-HS
Degree RequiredMD + IM residency + cardiology fellowship
Board Certs RequiredABIM Internal Medicine + Cardiology
Entry Salary$220K–$300K
#4
Corporate / Big-Law Partner
Law · Mergers, Securities, Private Equity
$390K
Training11–15 years post-HS
Degree RequiredJD + bar exam + 7–10 yrs to partnership
First-Year Associate$215K–$235K (Am Law 100)
Partnership Rate~3–5% of associates
#5
Investment Banking MD
Finance · Capital Markets, M&A Advisory
$350K–$1.2M
Training4–8 years post-HS typical
Degree RequiredBS (Finance/Econ) ± MBA at bulge bracket
Associate Base (MBA)$200K + bonus
Time to MD Rank12–16 years typically
#6
Petroleum Engineer
Engineering · Upstream Oil & Gas
$145K–$310K
Training4–6 years post-HS
Degree RequiredBS Petroleum Engineering (or ChemE/ME)
Entry Salary$85K–$115K (cycle-dependent)
PE LicenseRecommended for senior roles
#7
Chief Financial Officer
Executive · Public & Private Companies
$280K–$800K+
Training15–25 years to C-suite
Degree RequiredBS Accounting/Finance + MBA or CPA preferred
Typical BackgroundBig 4 audit → corporate finance → VP → CFO
Equity CompensationOften 40–60% of total pay
#8
Pharmacist (Clinical / Specialty)
Healthcare · Hospital & Specialty Pharmacy
$128K–$175K
Training6–8 years post-HS
Degree RequiredPharmD (4 yr) + residency optional but common
LicensureNAPLEX + MPJE required in all states
Fastest Path2+4 programs (6 yr total PharmD)

Training TimelinesYears from High School to Full Earning Potential

The visualization below shows a realistic breakdown of the training stages for each major career path. Understanding the sequencing — not just the total years — matters significantly for planning debt, income timing, and opportunity cost.

Neurosurgeon ~16 years total
Undergrad (4)
Med School (4)
Residency (7)
Cardiologist (Interventional) ~15 years total
Undergrad (4)
Med School (4)
Residency (3)
Fellowship (4)
Big-Law Partner ~15 years total
Undergrad (4)
JD (3)
Associate → Partner (8 yrs)
Investment Banking MD ~14 years (with MBA)
Undergrad (4)
Analyst (2)
MBA (2)
Associate → MD (6–8 yrs)
Oral & Maxillofacial Surgeon ~12–14 years total
Undergrad (4)
Dental School (4)
OMS Residency (4–6)
Petroleum Engineer ~4–6 years total
BS Engineering (4 yrs)
MS Optional (2)
Pharmacist (Clinical) ~6–8 years total
Pre-req (2)
PharmD (4)
Residency (2)
Undergraduate
Graduate School
Residency
Fellowship
Associate/Rank Climb
Law School (JD)
MBA
Optional/Variable

Entry StrategyHow to Get Into Each Career Track

Knowing the timeline is one thing. Understanding how competitive the entry points are — and where applicants actually fail to qualify — is more actionable. The table below maps each career to its critical bottleneck, acceptance rate context, and the single most important thing candidates can control.

Career Critical Bottleneck Entry Difficulty What Matters Most
Neurosurgeon Neurosurgery residency match (~200 spots/yr) Extremely Hard Research publications, Step 1/2 scores, letters of rec
Interventional Cardiologist Fellowship selection (~400 slots) Very Hard Research output, internal medicine board scores
Oral Surgeon OMS residency match (~260 spots/yr) Very Hard Dental school class rank, research, shadowing
Big-Law Partner Law school tier (T14 strongly preferred) Very Hard LSAT score, GPA, law review, summer associate offer
Investment Banking MD Analyst recruiting (target schools + GPA) Very Hard Networking early, internship conversion, school pedigree
CFO VP-to-C-suite transition (highly political) Competitive Executive relationships, broad financial leadership, CPA/MBA
Petroleum Engineer Hiring cycles tied to oil price Moderate BS from strong engineering school, internship at operator
Clinical Pharmacist PharmD program admission (2.5–3.5 GPA floor) Accessible PCAT score, healthcare volunteering, science GPA

Practical AdviceWhat High Earners Wish They'd Known Earlier

Start specializing your network before you graduate

In medicine, which residency program a physician matches to — and which attending physicians they work under — shapes subspecialty access for years. In law, which firms a 2L summer associate interviews with determines whether the partnership track is even available. Both require networking that starts in the first or second year of professional school, not the last.

Understand the income curve, not just the peak

Published salary figures almost always reflect attending or senior-level compensation. A neurosurgery resident earns $65,000–$80,000 per year during a 7-year residency — working 60–80 hour weeks. A first-year associate at a major law firm earns $215,000 but will likely work 2,200+ billable hours annually. The peak salary is real; the path to it has a very different economics.

The two paths into finance: analyst vs. MBA

Investment banking can be entered directly from undergraduate school at target universities, or via a post-MBA associate role at any point in a career. The direct undergraduate path (analyst → associate → VP → MD) typically takes 12–16 years to reach managing director. The MBA path resets the clock to associate level but opens doors for career changers with non-finance backgrounds — provided the MBA is from a top-10 program.

Geographic concentration still matters in 2025

Despite remote work expanding many industries, the highest-compensation roles in law (New York, Washington D.C.), finance (New York, San Francisco), and medicine (urban academic medical centers) remain geographically concentrated. Cost-of-living adjustments matter significantly when comparing a $620,000 neurosurgery salary in a mid-size city versus the same role in Manhattan.

"The careers that pay the most are not just hard to reach — they are hard to stay in. Burnout, licensing demands, and professional liability are a cost of admission that salary figures alone will never show."

— Synthesized from AAMC Physician Wellbeing surveys and ABA Legal Career surveys

Common QuestionsFrequently Asked Questions

Yes — but the economic calculus changes materially. A 35-year-old who enters medical school graduates at 39, completes residency at 43–48, and may have 15–20 working years as an attending rather than 30. Many career-changers choose shorter-path specialties (family medicine, psychiatry) to maximize their earning window. Law is somewhat more forgiving: a 35-year-old JD who joins a firm as a first-year associate can still realistically reach senior counsel or partner before 50.
It depends on the path and firm. At bulge-bracket banks (Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan), the MBA-to-associate pipeline remains dominant for candidates who didn't enter as undergraduate analysts. At boutique banks and smaller firms, work experience and demonstrated deal exposure can substitute. For the CFO track, an MBA accelerates but a CPA credential combined with Big 4 experience has produced many Fortune 500 CFOs without an MBA.
Among those listed, clinical pharmacists and petroleum engineers consistently report higher satisfaction with hours compared to surgeons or investment bankers. Dermatology and radiology (not listed here due to more moderate pay) are frequently cited as medicine's best-balanced specialties. Investment banking at the MD level is notoriously demanding regardless of firm or title — the culture is a fundamental feature of the industry, not an artifact of specific employers.
Figures reflect median total cash compensation from the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment & Wage Statistics (May 2024), cross-referenced with MGMA Physician Compensation Reports, the NALP Associate Salary Survey, and Salary.com industry data. They include base salary and regular bonus structures. Investment banking and CFO figures vary more widely due to equity and discretionary bonuses, so ranges are given rather than medians. Overhead, malpractice premiums, and student loan payments are not deducted in any figure cited.
Yes — though they're less represented in median salary surveys. Skilled trades (elevator mechanics, power line workers, pipefitters) frequently exceed $100,000 with overtime in high-cost-of-living cities, with apprenticeships rather than degrees as the entry point. Successful entrepreneurs, real estate developers, and technology sales professionals can reach high six figures with a bachelor's or less, though income variance is significantly higher and timelines are less predictable than licensed professions.
Editorial note

Salary data represents U.S. national figures and will vary substantially by state, city, employer size, and specialty. Figures are updated periodically but the education timelines and licensing requirements are the most durable data points here — they change slowly even as salaries fluctuate with economic cycles.