Career & Workforce Research · Verified Against Primary Sources · Updated June 2026
Future Careers Without a Degree: 20 High-Paying Jobs for the AI Era
Real wage data pulled straight from BLS.gov, real certifications, and an honest look at which no-degree careers actually hold up once artificial intelligence enters the picture.
Every year, millions of American teenagers hear the same advice: get a degree, or get left behind. That advice is no longer holding up the way it used to.
A LendingTree analysis of Census Bureau data found that 5.7 million full-time U.S. workers without a bachelor’s degree earned $100,000 or more in 2023, about 9% of that workforce. They didn’t get there by accident. They got there with certifications, apprenticeships, and skills that artificial intelligence still can’t replicate.
Apple CEO Tim Cook said it plainly back in 2019, at a White House workforce policy meeting: “About half of our U.S. employment last year were people that did not have a four-year degree. And we’re very proud of that.” Google, IBM, Tesla, Delta Air Lines, and Bank of America have since echoed the sentiment, dropping degree requirements from thousands of listings.
Meanwhile, AI is rewriting the rules of work faster than any college catalog can keep up. The World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report 2025 projects 170 million new jobs worldwide by 2030, alongside 92 million roles displaced, for a net gain of 78 million jobs. The careers that thrive through this shift won’t be defined by diplomas. They’ll be defined by skills.
This guide breaks down 20 high-paying careers that don’t require a bachelor’s degree, grouped by how well they hold up against AI disruption. Every figure below has been checked directly against the BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook or another named primary source — and where the data is mixed or the “no degree” label needs a caveat, we say so. Every role pays well above the U.S. median personal income of $45,140 in 2024, per the Census Bureau, often two or three times over.
Quick answer
- Highest overall pay: air traffic controllers, at a BLS median of $144,580 — no bachelor’s degree required.
- Highest-paid trade: elevator and escalator installers, at a BLS median of $106,580.
- Fastest to start: a cybersecurity certification or a commercial driver’s license, both under three months.
- Most AI-resistant: skilled trades and hands-on healthcare roles, where physical judgment can’t be automated away.
01The Degree Premium Is Cracking — But Read the Fine Print
The shift toward skills-based hiring is real, and it’s accelerating. NACE — the National Association of Colleges and Employers — found that 70% of employers now use skills-based hiring for entry-level roles in 2026, up from 65% a year earlier. GPA, once a default filter, has collapsed too, falling from 73% of employers in 2019 to just 42% today.
However, intent and practice aren’t the same thing, and this is the part most “no-degree jobs” lists skip. A landmark Harvard Business School and Burning Glass Institute study reviewed thousands of companies that publicly dropped degree requirements. Forty-five percent did so “in name only.” At some large firms, fewer than 1 in 700 new hires lacked a bachelor’s degree, even after the requirement was scrapped.
“Changing your hiring policy is, at best, the end of the beginning. Or maybe it’s just a plain old beginning if you are aiming to accomplish something more than virtue washing.” — Joseph Fuller, Harvard Business School, lead researcher on the skills-based hiring study
So what does this mean for you? It means the opportunity is genuine, but it rewards people who target the right roles, the right industries, and proof of skill that employers can actually check. The good news: the same research found real movement at companies including Apple, Walmart, Target, General Motors, and Cigna, plus public employers like the State of Minnesota and the City of Denver. These organizations hired, on average, 18% more non-degree workers after dropping the requirement.
There’s a financial backdrop worth remembering, too. The average debt among bachelor’s degree holders sits near $35,530, according to the Education Data Initiative, and total U.S. student loan debt has crossed $1.83 trillion. Every career on this list can be entered for a fraction of that cost, often while you’re already earning a paycheck.
02What “AI Era” Actually Means for These 20 Jobs
Not every well-paying job needs to be “AI-proof” to be a smart choice, and the honest picture here is more nuanced than most headlines suggest.
The World Economic Forum’s research shows AI and information-processing technologies alone will create roughly 11 million jobs and displace about 9 million by 2030, more churn than any other technology trend it tracks. At the same time, 86% of employers expect AI and big data to transform their business within that period.
That’s why every career below carries one of two AI-era advantages. Some, like cybersecurity, put workers inside the AI economy, defending the systems companies now depend on. Others, like electricians and radiation therapists, rely on physical dexterity, split-second judgment, and human trust, qualities that remain difficult to automate.
“As we enter 2025, the landscape of work continues to evolve at a rapid pace. Transformational breakthroughs, particularly in generative artificial intelligence (GenAI), are reshaping industries and tasks across all sectors.” — Saadia Zahidi, Managing Director, World Economic Forum, preface to the Future of Jobs Report 2025
The smart move isn’t avoiding AI altogether. It’s choosing a career where you either steer the technology or stand on ground it genuinely can’t reach.
03All 20 Jobs at a Glance
Here’s the full lineup. Wherever possible, the figure is a BLS median annual wage straight from the Occupational Outlook Handbook (May 2024 data, the latest available at publication). Where BLS doesn’t track an occupation, or the role spans too wide a pay range to reduce to one number, that’s noted instead of forced into a false precision. Confirm current figures yourself at bls.gov/ooh before making a decision.
A note on accuracy
Four roles below — information security analyst, sales engineer, construction manager, and cloud architect — are flagged with a BLS: bachelor’s typical tag. That means the Occupational Outlook Handbook officially lists a bachelor’s degree as the typical entry path, even though certification- or experience-based hiring is a documented, real alternative for each. We’d rather tell you that upfront than let a “no-degree job” list overstate its case.
| Job | Reported pay | Typical entry path | AI-era outlook |
|---|---|---|---|
| Air Traffic Controller | $144,580 median | FAA Academy + AT-SA exam | Irreplaceable human judgment |
| AI Prompt Engineer | $126,000 median | Self-taught / LLM portfolio | Native to the AI economy |
| Cybersecurity / Info-Sec Analyst | $124,910 median | CompTIA Security+ (BLS: bachelor’s typical) | Grows as AI creates new risks |
| Sales Engineer | $121,520 median | Product certs + sales track (BLS: bachelor’s typical) | Relationship-driven, hard to fake |
| Commercial Pilot | $122,670 median | Flight hours + ratings | Human-in-the-cockpit required |
| Cloud Solutions Architect | ~$129,000 avg.* | AWS certification (BLS: bachelor’s typical) | Builds AI infrastructure |
| UX/UI Designer | $73K–$119K range* | Google UX Certificate | Shapes how people use AI tools |
| Construction Manager | $106,980 median | Trade-to-management path (BLS: bachelor’s typical) | On-site judgment stays human |
| Elevator & Escalator Installer | $106,580 median | NEIEP apprenticeship | Confined-space repair, AI-resistant |
| Transportation & Distribution Manager | $102,010 median | HS diploma + experience | Coordinates AI-assisted logistics |
| Radiation Therapist | $101,990 median | Associate degree/certificate | AI assists planning, not delivery |
| Real Estate Agent / Broker | Commission-based* | State license exam | Local trust, negotiation skill |
| Dental Hygienist | $94,260 median | 2-yr associate degree | Recession-proof, hands-on care |
| Diagnostic Medical Sonographer | $89,340 median | 2-yr associate degree/certificate | Hands-on scanning, human read |
| Aircraft Mechanic & Service Tech | $78,680 median | FAA A&P certification | Safety-critical, hands-on work |
| Digital Marketing Manager | $70K–$120K range* | Google/HubSpot certification | Strategy beats AI-generated content |
| Surgical Technologist | $62,830 median | 1–2 yr certificate | Precision under pressure, human-only |
| Wind Turbine Technician | $62,580 median | Technical certificate | Tied for fastest-growing U.S. job |
| Electrician (all levels) | $62,350 median* | 4–5 yr paid apprenticeship | Physical work AI can’t perform |
| Solar Photovoltaic Installer | $51,860 median | Certificate / paid apprenticeship | Tied for fastest-growing U.S. job |
*Industry-survey average (Glassdoor/Coursera/PayScale), not a BLS median; commission- or experience-driven roles aren’t reduced to one figure; electrician figure is the BLS median across all experience levels — see the trades section below for journeyman/master detail. All BLS figures are May 2024 OEWS data via the Occupational Outlook Handbook.
Bars show the figures in the table above for roles with a single defensible national number (mostly BLS OEWS medians, May 2024). Sales engineer and real estate agent are commission- or market-driven and aren’t charted to avoid implying false precision.
04Tech & AI Careers — Inside the Machine
These four careers don’t fight AI. They build it, train it, design around it, and defend it. Certifications and portfolios carry more weight than diplomas — though as the flags below show, official classifications haven’t all caught up yet.
1. AI Prompt Engineer
Prompt engineers design and refine the instructions that guide tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini toward useful answers. Glassdoor puts median total pay at $126,000 as of December 2025, with senior specialists at major AI labs clearing $200,000. There’s no BLS occupation code for this role yet — it’s too new — so every figure here comes from job-board data, not government statistics. Most practitioners break in through writing, marketing, or self-taught NLP projects rather than a computer science degree.
2. Cybersecurity Analyst
Information security analysts earn a median of $124,910, per BLS data (May 2024) — but BLS lists a bachelor’s degree as the typical entry path, not a certification. The exception is real, just not the rule: BLS notes that “some workers enter the occupation with a high school diploma and relevant industry training and certifications,” such as CompTIA Security+. The field is recession-resistant either way: BLS projects 29% growth through 2034.
3. Cloud Solutions Architect
Cloud architects design the infrastructure behind nearly every modern app and AI product. Holders of the AWS Certified Solutions Architect – Associate credential average about $129,000 in base salary, climbing toward $155,000 at the Professional tier, per Coursera and PayScale data. BLS doesn’t track this occupation on its own, so there’s no official education requirement to cite — the certification itself is what employers screen for.
4. UX/UI Designer
UX designers shape how people experience apps and AI products, and the World Economic Forum lists UX/UI design among the fastest-growing jobs globally, with 45% projected growth by 2030. Reported average pay varies a lot by source — about $73,000 on Salary.com, $103,000 on Glassdoor, $119,000 per the UX Design Institute — a reminder to check more than one database before negotiating. Google’s UX Design Certificate, a six-month program, is widely accepted in place of a design degree.
05Skilled Trades & Infrastructure — AI Can’t Hold a Wrench
Trades are aging out faster than they’re being replaced, and that scarcity is pushing wages up. Apprenticeships pay you to learn, with zero tuition.
5. Master Electrician
BLS reports a $62,350 median wage across all electricians, with 77,400 new jobs projected between 2024 and 2034. That single number undersells the trade’s ceiling: experienced journeyman electricians commonly report $75,000 to $90,000, and licensed master electricians who run their own crews regularly clear $100,000, per IBEW and NECA apprenticeship data — though those higher figures come from trade-industry reporting, not a separate BLS category. The path runs through a four-to-five-year paid apprenticeship: no tuition, no debt.
6. Elevator and Escalator Installer
This is the single highest-paid trade tracked by BLS, more than double the median wage across all occupations. It demands a competitive apprenticeship through the National Elevator Industry Educational Program, plus mechanical and electronic aptitude that AI and robotics still can’t replicate inside a tight, unpredictable elevator shaft.
7. Wind Turbine Technician
BLS projects wind turbine technicians and solar photovoltaic installers to be the two fastest-growing occupations in the country through 2034 — wind techs specifically at 50%. Median pay sits at $62,580, and entry requires only a technical certificate, not a bachelor’s degree, completed in under two years.
8. Solar Photovoltaic Installer
Solar installation is the other half of that growth story, with BLS projecting 42% growth through 2034. Median pay is a more modest $51,860, with the top 10% of installers earning above $80,150 — lower than some other trades here, but it climbs quickly with licensing, experience, and a move into crew-lead roles.
06Aviation & Transportation — Human Hands on the Controls
Few industries demand split-second human judgment the way aviation does. These roles pay extremely well precisely because the stakes of getting it wrong are so high.
9. Air Traffic Controller
Air traffic controllers earned a median of $144,580 in May 2024, per the BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook — one of the highest-paying jobs in America that skips the bachelor’s degree entirely. Entry runs through the FAA’s Air Traffic Skills Assessment and the FAA Academy, not a college classroom. One catch: candidates typically must begin training before age 31.
10. Commercial Pilot
Commercial pilots earn a median of $122,670, per BLS data, with the lowest 10% still clearing roughly $73,000 and top earners well into six figures at cargo carriers and corporate flight departments. The path starts with a private pilot license, followed by instrument and commercial ratings and roughly 250 logged flight hours — a credential ladder built on hours in the air, not hours in a lecture hall.
11. Aircraft Mechanic and Service Technician
Keeping planes airworthy pays a median of $78,680, per BLS data. Entry requires passing FAA exams for an Airframe and Powerplant certification, typically earned through an FAA-approved technical program. Airlines and manufacturers hire directly from these programs, and demand stays steady as the global fleet ages and expands.
12. Transportation, Storage, and Distribution Manager
Logistics keeps the economy moving, and managers in this field earn a median of $102,010, per BLS data — often with no more than a high school diploma plus years of operational experience. Certifications such as the Certified Supply Chain Professional credential boost earning power as e-commerce keeps reshaping how goods move from warehouse to doorstep.
07Healthcare & Allied Health — Hands, Empathy, and Equipment AI Can’t Replace
Healthcare offers some of the best pay-to-training ratios anywhere. Most roles need a two-year associate degree or certificate, not a four-year commitment.
13. Radiation Therapist
Radiation therapists administer cancer treatments and earn a median of $101,990, comfortably into six figures, per BLS data. AI now assists with treatment planning, but the hands-on delivery of care and the emotional support patients need during treatment remain entirely human.
14. Diagnostic Medical Sonographer
Sonographers use ultrasound equipment to help diagnose everything from pregnancies to heart conditions, earning a median of $89,340. The role needs only an associate degree or postsecondary certificate, and demand is projected to grow 13%, much faster than average, as imaging-based diagnostics expand across medicine.
15. Dental Hygienist
Dental hygienists earn a median of $94,260 with just a two-year associate degree, per BLS data. The role offers strong part-time and contract flexibility, and demand holds steady regardless of economic conditions.
16. Surgical Technologist
Surgical techs assist surgeons in the operating room, preparing instruments and maintaining a sterile field, earning a median of $62,830. Most complete a certificate or associate program in under two years, entering a role where precision under pressure simply can’t be handed off to a machine.
08Business, Sales & Creative — Relationship Skills Beat Resumes
These roles reward communication, persuasion, and creative judgment, qualities no resume line fully captures, and qualities AI still struggles to fake convincingly.
17. Sales Engineer
Sales engineers translate technical products into business value for customers and earn a median of $121,520, per BLS data, with the top 10% clearing $202,670. BLS lists a bachelor’s degree as the typical entry path here too — but technical certifications paired with hands-on product experience are a documented alternative, especially for technicians moving from a hands-on role into client-facing sales.
18. Digital Marketing Manager / SEO Specialist
Digital marketers who master SEO, paid media, and AI-assisted content tools can earn $70,000 to $120,000 or more, with Google and HubSpot certifications often substituting for a marketing degree. This range comes from industry salary surveys rather than a single BLS occupation, since “digital marketing manager” spans several BLS categories. As AI generates more raw content, marketers who understand strategy and search intent become more valuable, not less.
19. Real Estate Agent / Broker
Real estate professionals need a state license, not a college degree, to practice. Pay is commission-driven and varies enormously by market and deal volume, so it resists a single useful median — but top agents in competitive metro markets routinely earn six figures, and the job’s reliance on local relationships and negotiation stays resistant to automation.
20. Construction Manager
Construction managers coordinate budgets, schedules, and safety across job sites, earning a median of $106,980, with top earners above $176,990, per BLS data. BLS lists a bachelor’s degree as the typical path — but it explicitly notes that workers with a high school diploma and years of trade experience can also reach the role, most often as self-employed general contractors rather than as hires at larger firms. AI assists with scheduling, but on-site judgment remains deeply human.
09How to Actually Land One of These Jobs
Skills-based hiring rewards proof, not promises. Four moves separate people who land these roles from people who simply apply for them.
Start with a credential that’s cheap and fast. Google Career Certificates, CompTIA exams, and AWS certifications typically cost $30 to $700 and take three to six months, a rounding error next to $35,530 in average degree debt.
Build a portfolio before you need one. Software developers publish projects on GitHub. UX designers document case studies. Electricians complete pre-apprenticeship programs that double as a track record. Employers want evidence they can check, not just a credential they have to trust.
Read the job posting, not the press release. A “dropped degree requirement” doesn’t always mean a company is actively hiring non-degree workers. Look for listings that explicitly name certifications, portfolios, or apprenticeships as accepted substitutes. That’s a real signal, not a marketing one.
Go where the data says the doors are actually open. The Harvard and Burning Glass research found genuine movement at companies including Apple, Walmart, Target, General Motors, and Cigna, plus public-sector employers like the State of Minnesota and the City of Denver, places that hired, on average, 18% more non-degree workers after dropping the requirement.
10Frequently Asked Questions
What is the highest-paying job without a degree?
Air traffic controller tops the list, at a BLS median of $144,580 (May 2024) with no bachelor’s degree required. Among skilled trades, elevator and escalator installers lead at a BLS median of $106,580.
Can you really make six figures without a college degree?
Yes. A LendingTree analysis of Census Bureau data found 5.7 million full-time U.S. workers without a bachelor’s degree earned $100,000 or more in 2023 — about 9% of that workforce. Air traffic control, the trades, and logistics management are reliable paths there.
Which jobs without a degree are safest from AI?
Roles built on physical dexterity and trust, like electricians, elevator mechanics, and surgical technologists, are hardest to automate. Roles that work alongside AI, like cybersecurity, stay resilient because they shift with the technology rather than competing against it.
Do employers actually hire people without degrees, or is it just marketing?
Both, depending on the company. Skills-based hiring has genuinely expanded in cybersecurity, the trades, and aviation. But Harvard research found that dropping the degree requirement changed fewer than 1 in 700 actual hires at some large firms, so target roles where certifications are explicitly accepted.
What’s the fastest high-paying career to start without a degree?
CompTIA Security+ for cybersecurity, or a commercial driver’s license, are among the fastest. Both can be completed in under three months and lead directly to job offers.
Is a certification as good as a degree?
It depends on the field. In aviation and most trades, certifications and licenses carry equal weight because they prove a specific, current skill. In fields like cybersecurity, sales engineering, and construction management, BLS still lists a bachelor’s as the norm — certifications are a real but less common path in. In medicine or law, a formal degree remains non-negotiable.
11The Bottom Line
The old equation, degree equals income, was never as reliable as it looked, and AI is exposing the cracks faster than expected. The careers above prove that six-figure work is available to people willing to trade four years of tuition for a faster, cheaper, more targeted path.
None of this means college is worthless, and it doesn’t mean every job on this list is equally easy to enter without one. For careers including medicine, law, and research, a degree remains the only door. For a few others here, a degree is still the BLS-typical path even though exceptions exist. But for millions of people at a career crossroads in 2026, the choice is no longer “degree or nothing.” It’s “which skill, which certification, and which door is actually open — and is it open the way the headline says it is.”
As Tim Cook put it back in 2019, Apple had “never really thought that a college degree was the thing that you had to have to do well.” The AI era is making that statement true for more industries than ever, certification by certification. The only question left is which of these 20 paths you’ll walk through first.