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Career test for Princeton students

See which careers fit your traits — based on what 571+ Princeton alumni actually went on to do.

Ivy LeagueNew Jersey
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What Princeton grads actually do

Based on 571 notable Princeton alumni with Wikipedia pages. Data: Wikidata (CC0).

university teacher
147
politician
137
lawyer
102
writer
75
mathematician
57
physicist
44
judge
40
journalist
39
diplomat
33
economist
31
businessperson
25
historian
24

Notable Princeton alumni

Aaron Burr
Aaron Burr
bretteur · lawyer
James William Abert
James William Abert
meteorological observer · zoologist
John Mather
John Mather
university teacher · mathematician
Akshay Venkatesh
Akshay Venkatesh
mathematician · university teacher
Tim Ferriss
Tim Ferriss
non-fiction writer · consultant
Raymond Smullyan
Raymond Smullyan
chess composer · mathematician
Jennifer Weiner
Jennifer Weiner
television producer · writer
Juan Martín Maldacena
Juan Martín Maldacena
university teacher · physicist

Salary outlook for top Princeton career paths

National median annual wage (BLS Occupational Employment Statistics).

politician
10th–90th percentile: $21,010$129,510
$47,290
median / yr
lawyer
10th–90th percentile: $69,760$239,200
$145,760
median / yr
writer
10th–90th percentile: $40,900$148,240
$73,690
median / yr
mathematician
10th–90th percentile: $62,260$183,500
$116,440
median / yr
physicist
10th–90th percentile: $80,950$232,940
$155,680
median / yr
journalist
10th–90th percentile: $31,550$160,360
$57,500
median / yr

Find your fit in 2 minutes

Take the Career Match test — RIASEC framework used by 60,000+ students. See which careers from this Princeton alumni list match your traits.

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About Princeton

Princeton University is a private Ivy League research university in Princeton, New Jersey, United States. Founded in 1746 in Elizabeth as the College of New Jersey, Princeton is the fourth-oldest institution of higher education in the United States and one of the nine colonial colleges chartered before the American Revolution. The institution moved to Newark in 1747 and then to its Mercer County campus in Princeton nine years later. It officially became a university in 1896 and was subsequently renamed Princeton University. The university is governed by the Trustees of Princeton University and has an endowment of $37.7 billion, the largest endowment per student in the United States. Princeton provides undergraduate and graduate instruction in the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, and engineering to approximately 9,000 students on its main campus spanning 600 acres (2.4 km2) within the borough of Princeton. It offers postgraduate degrees through the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs, the School of Engineering and Applied Science, the School of Architecture and the Bendheim Center for Finance. The university also manages the Department of Energy's Princeton Plasma Physics Laboratory and is home to the NOAA's Geophysical Fluid Dynamics Laboratory. It is classified among "R1: Doctoral Universities – Very high research activity" and has one of the largest university libraries in the world. Princeton uses a residential college system and is known for its eating clubs for juniors and seniors. The university has over 500 student organizations. Princeton students embrace a wide variety of traditions from both the past and present. The university is an NCAA Division I school and competes in the Ivy League. The school's athletic team, the Princeton Tigers, has won the most titles in its conference and has sent many students and alumni to the Olympics. As of October 2025, 81 Nobel laureates, 16 Fields Medalists and 17 Turing Award laureates have been affiliated with Princeton University as alumni, faculty members, or researchers. In addition, Princeton has been associated with 21 National Medal of Science awardees, five Abel Prize awardees, 11 National Humanities Medal recipients, 217 Rhodes Scholars, 137 Marshall Scholars, and 62 Gates Cambridge Scholars. Two U.S. presidents, twelve U.S. Supreme Court justices (three of whom serve on the court as of 2026) and numerous living industry and media tycoons and foreign heads of state are all counted among Princeton's alumni body. Princeton has graduated many members of the U.S. Congress and the U.S. Cabinet, including eight secretaries of state, three secretaries of defense and two chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Princeton alumni also include 113 athletes who competed in the Olympics, winning 19 gold medals, 24 silver medals, and 23 bronze medals.

Source: Wikipedia · Licensed under CC-BY-SA 4.0.

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