I’ve noticed something over the years.
Students don’t really ask “what job pays the most?”
They ask “what job won’t make me regret my degree five years later?”
Salary is just the visible part. Under it sits stress, years of study, immigration rules, burnout, luck, timing.
Let’s talk about the jobs as they actually are, not as Google lists them.
1. Chief Executive Officer (CEO)
Everyone wants to be one. Almost no one plans realistically for it.
A CEO isn’t a job you apply for after graduation. It’s what happens after years of decisions – some smart, many wrong. I’ve seen MBAs from top schools still take 15-20 years to reach this seat.
| Country | Average Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $725,553 – $1.5M+ |
| UK | £320,000 – £610,000 |
| Canada | CAD 240,000 – 850,000 |
| Australia | AUD 300,000 – 1.2M |
| Germany | €690,000 |
| UAE | AED 2.8M |
| India | ₹3.3 – 4.7 Cr |
Yes, the money is obscene in countries like the US, UK, UAE. But the pressure is permanent. One bad quarter and everything shakes.
Most CEOs don’t sleep well. That part never makes it to salary tables.
2. Anesthesiologist
If you want pure salary logic, this role is hard to beat.
But here’s the part students ignore : This is one of the longest academic journeys you can choose. Medical school. Residency. Fellowships. Exams that don’t forgive.
You’re paid well because mistakes aren’t allowed. Ever.
| Country | Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $425,000 |
| UK | £112,000 |
| Canada | $340,000 |
| Australia | $390,000 |
| France | €200,000 |
| India | ₹25 L |
In the US and Canada, salaries look massive. In India, respectable – but nowhere close unless you build private practice.
This job is calm on the surface. Inside, it’s constant alertness.
3. Surgeons (Neuro, Ortho, General)
Surgeons earn because they carry risk on their hands.
I’ve met orthopaedic surgeons abroad who earn more than senior tech leaders – but they’ve given up weekends, family events, even hobbies. Surgery rewards obsession.
| Country | Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $425,000 |
| UK | £225,000 |
| Canada | $365,000 |
| Australia | $215,000 |
| France | €215,000 |
| India | ₹35 L |
If you don’t love operating theatres, don’t chase this salary. It will eat you.
4. Specialised Physicians
Cardiologists. Radiologists. Oncologists.
These are not “doctor jobs”. These are lifetime commitments.
The money comes later. Much later.
What students don’t realise: immigration for doctors is complex. Licensing exams change country to country. Clearing USMLE or PLAB isn’t academic – it’s mental endurance.
| Country | Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $300,000 – $500,000 |
| UK | $120,000 – $250,000 |
| Canada | $220,000 – $400,000 |
| Australia | $200,000 – $350,000 |
| France | $110,000 – $200,000 |
| India | $15,000 – $60,000 |
Those who make it? Financially secure for life.
5. Orthodontists
Quietly one of the smartest medical careers.
Less emergency pressure. Predictable schedules. High private practice income in countries like the US, UK, Australia.
But again – long education. Precision matters. Reputation matters.
| Country | Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $220,000 – $280,000+ |
| UK | £80,000 – £120,000+ |
| Canada | $160,000 – $240,000+ |
| Australia | $180,000 – $250,000+ |
| France | €80,000 – €130,000+ |
| India | ₹8 – 20 L |
This is not fast money. It’s stable, long money.
6. Psychiatrists
Ten years ago, this field was ignored.
Now? It’s exploding.
Mental health awareness has changed everything. Countries like the US, Canada, Australia are desperate for psychiatrists.
| Country | Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $245,000 |
| UK | £225,000 |
| Canada | $315,000 |
| Australia | $275,000 |
| France | €160,000 |
| India | ₹27 L |
What makes this role different is emotional stamina. You absorb stories. Trauma. Silence.
If you can handle that – the pay follows naturally.
7. AI / Machine Learning Engineers
Let me be honest here.
This salary wave is real – but unstable.
Right now, AI engineers are paid aggressively because companies are racing. Five years later? The market will reward depth, not certificates.
Students who jump in without math, logic, patience usually burn out.
| Country | Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $150,000 – $350,000 |
| UK | £60,000 – £90,000+ |
| Canada | $90,000 – $130,000+ |
| Australia | $110,000 – $160,000+ |
| France | €50,000 – €80,000+ |
| India | ₹8 – 18 L |
Those who actually understand models, systems, limitations – they print money.
This job rewards curiosity more than ambition.
8. Investment Bankers
This salary looks glamorous. The lifestyle isn’t.
Long nights. Brutal deadlines. High politics. Many quit by 30.
But if you survive early years, especially in the US or UK, bonuses alone can outpace most professions.
| Country | Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $150,000 – $256,000 |
| UK | £75,000 |
| Canada | $110,000 |
| Australia | $145,000 |
| France | €115,000 |
| India | ₹15 – 20 L |
This career suits people who thrive under pressure – not people chasing status.
9. Data Scientists
Still one of the safest high-paying bets.
But here’s the truth : Average data scientists are replaceable. Good ones aren’t.
| Country | Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $120,000 – $165,000+ |
| UK | £50,000 – £85,000+ |
| Canada | $80,000 – $120,000+ |
| Australia | $100,000 – $145,000+ |
| France | €45,000 – €70,000+ |
| India | ₹9 – 25 L |
If you can explain data to humans, not just machines, your salary keeps climbing. If you can’t – growth plateaus fast.
10. Airline Pilots
Pilots earn because responsibility is non-negotiable.
Training is expensive. Licenses are country-specific. Health standards are strict.
| Country | Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $200,000 |
| UK | £110,000 |
| Canada | $150,500 |
| Australia | $175,000 |
| France | €175,000 |
| India | ₹20 – 50 L |
But once you’re established, especially with international carriers, income is strong and predictable.
This is one of the few jobs where age can increase value.
11. Chief Information Officer (CIO)
This role doesn’t exist for fresh graduates.
CIOs earn because they understand both technology and business failures. They’ve seen systems crash. Data leak. Companies panic.
| Country | Average Annual Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $160,000 – $300,000 |
| UK | £120,000 – £200,000 |
| Canada | $140,000 – $220,000 |
| Australia | $170,000 – $260,000 |
| Germany | €130,000 – €210,000 |
| India | ₹45 – ₹90 L |
It’s a slow climb. But once there, compensation reflects trust.
12. Petroleum Engineers
High pay, yes. But also volatile.
Oil prices drop, hiring freezes. Political risk. Remote locations.
| Country | Average Annual Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $135,000 – $205,000 |
| Canada | $120,000 – $180,000 |
| Australia | $130,000 – $190,000 |
| UAE | AED 350,000 – 700,000 |
| Norway | €110,000 – €180,000 |
| India | ₹10 – ₹25 L |
Students choosing this should understand cycles. This is not a smooth career. It’s a high-risk, high-reward one.
13. Corporate Lawyers
Corporate law abroad pays well – but only at the top.
Mid-level lawyers earn decently, not insanely. The real money comes in mergers, acquisitions, international arbitration.
| Country | Average Annual Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $145,000 – $200,000+ |
| UK | £90,000 – £160,000 |
| Canada | $110,000 – $180,000 |
| Australia | $120,000 – $190,000 |
| Singapore | SGD 140,000 – 250,000 |
| India | ₹12 – ₹30 L |
Also, law is deeply local. Studying abroad doesn’t guarantee practice rights everywhere.
14. Product Managers
This job looks simple. It’s not.
PMs earn because they make decisions without authority. They fail publicly. They balance chaos.
| Country | Average Annual Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $120,000 – $160,000 |
| UK | £60,000 – £95,000 |
| Canada | $90,000 – $140,000 |
| Australia | $100,000 – $150,000 |
| Germany | €75,000 – €120,000 |
| India | ₹15 – ₹40 L |
Tech-heavy markets (US, Canada, Europe) reward strong PMs well. Weak ones don’t last.
15. Software Engineers
Still a pillar. Still paying well.
But average engineers are everywhere now. Specialised ones – systems, security, AI infra – are where the salary jumps.
| Country | Average Annual Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $128,000 – $189,000 |
| UK | £55,000 – £90,000 |
| Canada | $85,000 – $130,000 |
| Australia | $95,000 – $140,000 |
| Germany | €70,000 – €120,000 |
| India | ₹6 – ₹25 L |
Coding alone isn’t enough anymore. Thinking matters.
16. Blockchain Developers
High pay today because supply is low.
But this field demands constant learning. Tools change. Platforms die. Regulations shift.
| Country | Average Annual Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $120,000 – $150,000 |
| UK | £70,000 – £110,000 |
| Canada | $100,000 – $140,000 |
| Australia | $110,000 – $160,000 |
| Germany | €80,000 – €130,000 |
| India | ₹12 – ₹30 L |
If you like uncertainty, this can be lucrative. If you want stability, think twice.
17. Cybersecurity Experts
Quietly becoming one of the safest high-paying careers.
Why? Because attacks won’t stop. Ever.
Governments, banks, hospitals – everyone needs security.
| Country | Average Annual Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $100,000 – $150,000 |
| UK | £60,000 – £100,000 |
| Canada | $90,000 – $140,000 |
| Australia | $110,000 – $160,000 |
| Germany | €75,000 – €120,000 |
| India | ₹10 – ₹28 L |
Stressful work, yes. But long-term demand is almost guaranteed.
18. Management Consultants
You’re paid for perspective.
Travel heavy. Long hours. Smart colleagues. Fast burnout if you don’t enjoy problem-solving.
Top firms pay extremely well. Others – moderately.
| Country | Average Annual Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $115,000 – $132,000 |
| UK | £70,000 – £110,000 |
| Canada | $90,000 – $135,000 |
| Australia | $100,000 – $145,000 |
| Germany | €80,000 – €120,000 |
| India | ₹12 – ₹35 L |
This career opens doors more than it pays initially.
19. Marketing Managers
High pay comes when revenue comes.
Marketing that doesn’t convert is useless. Those who understand data, psychology, and storytelling together rise fast.
| Country | Average Annual Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $80,000 – $150,000 |
| UK | £45,000 – £90,000 |
| Canada | $70,000 – $120,000 |
| Australia | $85,000 – $140,000 |
| Germany | €65,000 – €110,000 |
| India | ₹8 – ₹30 L |
Country matters here. US, UK, Australia reward marketing more than most regions.
20. Financial Managers
These professionals quietly control companies.
Forecasts, risks, strategy. When money is involved, trust pays.
| Country | Average Annual Salary |
|---|---|
| USA | $130,000 – $170,000 |
| UK | £75,000 – £130,000 |
| Canada | $100,000 – $150,000 |
| Australia | $120,000 – $170,000 |
| Germany | €90,000 – €140,000 |
| India | ₹15 – ₹45 L |
This role grows slowly but steadily. Less flashy. Very secure.
The Honest Takeaway —
Highest-paying jobs don’t come from chasing salary tables. They come from choosing discomfort early.
Long study. Hard skills. Emotional strain. Repeated failure.
Students Also Ask
The highest-paying jobs in 2026 are typically Chief Executive Officers (CEOs), specialist surgeons (especially neurosurgeons), and anesthesiologists. Among non-medical roles, AI leaders, investment bankers, and tech executives top the salary charts. Actual earnings depend heavily on the country, experience, and organisation size.
Studying abroad does not make jobs “easy,” but it significantly improves access. International degrees expose students to global employers, internships, research projects, and professional networks that are often unavailable locally. Countries like USA, UK, Canada, Germany, and Australia also offer post-study work options that help graduates gain real-world experience.
Careers that combine deep expertise with global demand tend to last. Medicine, AI and machine learning, cybersecurity, data science, management consulting, and specialised engineering roles are expected to remain highly paid well beyond 2030. These roles evolve with technology but rarely disappear.
Yes – but usually over time, not immediately. Many Indian students start with entry-level or mid-level salaries after graduation and grow into senior roles within 5–10 years. International exposure, continuous skill upgrades, leadership roles, and sometimes switching countries or companies play a big role in reaching top salary brackets.
An MBA is still valuable, especially from top global business schools, but it works best when combined with prior work experience. Roles in consulting, investment banking, leadership, and strategy continue to reward MBA graduates well. However, for tech-focused careers, specialised master’s degrees can sometimes outperform a general MBA.
The USA offers the highest salaries overall, but countries like Canada, Germany, and Australia often provide a better balance between income, work-life balance, healthcare, and long-term settlement options. The “best” country depends on whether your priority is maximum earnings, stability, or lifestyle.

