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✅ Many of them still pay $50/hr or more.
✅ And at least three high-pay remote careers offer full training and don’t require a college degree — including help desk support, inside sales, and entry-level UX design (per Business Insider & Parade Magazine reports).
- Typical pay ranges.
- Degree or no-degree notes.
- Why the role stays remote.
- Where people are actually getting hired.
High-Pay Remote Careers That Typically Require a Degree
1) Information Security Analyst
- Typical Pay: ~$60/hr median
- Degree: Bachelor’s common; skills/certs path possible (Security+, CySA+, CISSP)
- Why Still Remote: Security monitoring, incident response, and policy work are tool-driven and location-agnostic. 24/7 coverage favors distributed teams.
- Where to Look: LinkedIn, Indeed, Dice, government contractors
2) Software Developer
- Typical Pay: ~$130K/yr median
- Degree: Common—but no-degree routes exist (bootcamps/portfolio)
- Why Still Remote: Code repos, CI/CD, and async workflows make distributed engineering standard—especially for SaaS.
- Where to Look: Wellfound (AngelList), GitHub Jobs, Hired, company careers pages
3) Data Scientist
- Typical Pay: ~$54/hr median
- Degree: Bachelor’s+ common; portfolio + Python/SQL/ML stack can open doors
- Why Still Remote: Data pipelines, modeling, and dashboards are cloud-based; collaboration is async by default.
- Where to Look: Kaggle Jobs, LinkedIn, Levels.fyi job board
4) Database Administrator (DBA)
- Typical Pay: ~$59/hr median
- Degree: Bachelor’s typical; platform certs (AWS/RDS, Azure, Oracle) help
- Why Still Remote: Admin, tuning, backups, and security done over secure consoles; on-call rotations work anywhere.
- Where to Look: Dice, Indeed, enterprise IT contractors
5) Actuary
- Typical Pay: ~$60/hr median
- Degree/Path: Bachelor’s + professional exams (SOA/CAS). Entry roles may include remote on-the-job exam support.
- Why Still Remote: Modeling, risk analysis, and reporting are spreadsheet/scripting heavy and inherently desk-based.
- Where to Look: Society of Actuaries, insurance carriers, consulting firms
6) Economist
- Typical Pay: ~$55/hr median
- Degree: Master’s common
- Why Still Remote: Research, forecasting, and policy analysis rely on datasets and writing—not a physical office.
- Where to Look: Government postings (USAJOBS), think tanks, large corporates
7) Training & Development Manager
- Typical Pay: ~$61/hr median
- Degree: Bachelor’s + experience; L&D certs help (ATD)
- Why Still Remote: e-learning design, LMS admin, and global training calendars fit distributed teams; occasional travel only.
- Where to Look: LinkedIn, HR/L&D boards, enterprise learning vendors
8) Public Relations & Fundraising Manager
- Typical Pay: ~$64/hr median
- Degree: Bachelor’s typical; portfolio of wins matters most
- Why Still Remote: Media relations, campaign planning, donor pipelines, and reporting are digital; travel for key events only.
- Where to Look: PRSA Jobcenter, WorkInNonProfits, LinkedIn
High-Pay Remote Careers With No Degree Required
1. Project Management Specialist
- Typical Pay: ~$100,750/yr median
- Degree: Not required — skills-based hires happen; PMP/ACP helpful but optional
- Why Still Remote: Cross-team coordination, budgets, timelines, and standups run through tools like Slack, Jira, Asana, and ClickUp — no office needed.
- Where to Look: LinkedIn, WeWorkRemotely, FlexJobs, company PMO listings
2. Sales Representative (Remote B2B or SaaS)
- Typical Pay: ~$70K base + commissions (top reps can exceed $120K)
- Degree: Not required — persuasion, CRM fluency, and product knowledge matter more
- Why Still Remote: Calls, demos, and pipeline management happen over Zoom + CRM dashboards; many companies now hire fully remote SDRs/closers.
- Where to Look: Indeed, ZipRecruiter, SaaS-specific job boards (e.g., GrowTal, RevGenius Jobs)
3. Help Desk / IT Support Technician
- Typical Pay: ~$47K–$66K/yr average
- Degree: Not required — many employers train you internally
- Why Still Remote: Ticketing systems (Zendesk, Jira, ServiceNow) + screen-share tools mean support can be delivered from anywhere.
- Where to Look: Robert Half, KellyConnect, hospital systems, tech startups, LinkedIn
4.Insurance Agent (Remote Licensed or Trainee)
- Typical Pay: ~$100K+/yr possible (commission + renewals)
- Degree: Not required — companies often cover licensing + onboarding
- Why Still Remote: Policy sales, renewals, and client communication are done by phone, email, and Zoom. Hybrid or fully remote options are common.
- Where to Look: Indeed, FlexJobs, insurance carriers, remote brokerage firms
Note: Pay varies by company, seniority, and location. Use these as directional guides, not guarantees.
Free Resource: Remote Job Finder Guide
Click here to read: “How to Find Customer Service Jobs (Finder Toolkit + 4 Steps to Gain the Skills)”
✅ Time-saving search strings that surface no-degree and entry-level jobs for any career.
✅ 4 free skill-building steps (with training links + certificate options) to stand out fast in customer service remote roles.
What's Next?
Sources:
- Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
- Business Insider – “9 Remote Jobs That Pay $50/Hour or More”
- Fox Business – “Experts say work-from-home era is fading fast”
- CNBC / Yahoo Finance – “9 Remote Entry-Level Jobs That Pay $87K a Year”
- Parade Magazine – “11 High-Paying Jobs That Actually Mean It When They Say “No Experience Required”
Author
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Once upon a time, in a land of mystery and darkness, there was a man named Mr. Steve. He wasn't just any ordinary man, though. He founded Books After Dark, a platform for all things dark, mysterious, and self-publishing. Mr. Steve was a man of many talents. He was a contributing writer, graphic designer, and video creator. He had even ventured into the world of self-publishing, selling thousands of his books worldwide. Despite his success, Mr. Steve didn't want to keep all the secrets of self-publishing to himself. He wanted to provide education on self-publishing, affiliate marketing, and other online money-making opportunities. So thus, Books After Dark was born to help other aspiring authors and artists find success in the online world. In recent times, Mr. Steve has even delved into the world of low-content books, and he's excited to share his journey with others on the "Make Money Online with Books After Dark" YouTube channel. While he currently doesn't sell or promote his book titles through Books After Dark, who knows what the future holds? Mr. Steve is always up for a good mystery, and there's no telling what dark and mysterious tale he might come up with next.
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