Mean Income: $194,500 Top 10%: $370,000
Let’s face it — garlic and other home remedies can only go so far. When your home remedies aren’t working anymore, you contact your physician. Those can be found in hospitals or in private practice (in case you have some fancy insurance policy). Whether it’s stomachache, headache, or sniffles, you can count on one of these to help you out.
After all, they don’t go through years of studying and residency periods for nothing. Medical school is anything but cheap (between $19,000 and $68,000 a year), so it’s a good thing this job pays well. You know those student loans don’t pay themselves.
Funeral Service Managers
Mean Income: $79,930 Top 10%: $140,740
While we get no pleasure from saying this, working in the funeral industry is extremely luxurious and quite profitable. Caskets go for thousands of dollars, and funerals are a very expensive thing to hold. If you don’t mind the field (and spending your days consoling people), you can make great money in this business.
Funeral directors are responsible for the entire funeral process — from finding the right casket to filing the necessary paperwork. To get the job, you’ll need a degree in funeral service or mortuary science. Completing the American Board of Funeral Service Education (ABFSE) program is also necessary, but might be worth it.
Home Economics Teachers
Mean Income: $68,080 Top 10%: $110,650
Home Economics teachers get to teach young people practical life skills. These teachers help students learn about being financially smart, finding a career path, living a healthy lifestyle, doing your taxes, investing in real estate, and more. You basically get the chance to prepare young people for adulthood.
The job usually requires a degree or at least a very considerable base of experience. You may also need some other various certificates and licenses, depending on where you’d like to teach. It’s also crucially important to be a great communicator, love the subject, and have the ability to create engaging and well-structured lessons for students.
Lawyer
Mean Income: $120,910 Top 10%: $228,000
Lawyers, huh? You can't live with them and you can't live without them. Somehow, they managed to become the most hated and the most sought-after trained professionals out there. Without them, there would be no way for us common folk to navigate the labyrinth of law on our own.
Good lawyers end up making incredible amounts of money, and it's a good thing that they do because their tuition is high as the top floor of the Burj Khalifa. And that's not even the end of it — once the college degree is over, there is still an internship period, the bar exams, and actual job hunting.
R&D Manager
Mean Income: $142,120 Top 10%: $151,000
For those of you who have been out of the business sphere, let us tell you that R&D stands for research and development. Business savvy people who have been in that field for a long time or have a special talent for it end up being managers in that industry.
Practically speaking, those managers take care of every aspect of the product they were hired to deal with. It could be making the product more efficient, collaborating with other brands, doing market research, and the list goes on. There is a lot to wrap your head around but ultimately, the paycheck seems to be worth it.