College Major Salary by State: Where You Live Matters as Much as What You Study

Updated March 2026 · 9-minute read · Sources: BLS Occupational Employment Statistics, NACE

Most salary comparisons between college majors treat the United States as a single market. It isn't. A registered nurse in California earns dramatically more than a registered nurse in Mississippi — not because the work is different, but because local cost of living, union agreements, state funding, and employer competition create wildly different pay scales.

This guide shows you how geography interacts with your major choice, which states pay the most for the most common degree fields, and how to factor location into your decision.

Why Location Moves the Needle More Than People Realize

For many majors, the difference in median salary between the highest-paying state and the lowest-paying state is 40–70%. A software engineer in Washington State (home to Amazon and Microsoft headquarters) earns a dramatically higher median than one in South Dakota — for the same role, same experience level.

Three forces drive this disparity:

Computer Science & Software Engineering: By State

Software roles show the widest geographic disparity of any major field:

Takeaway: Remote-capable tech roles have partially equalized this gap. Many CS graduates now negotiate salaries tied to a high-cost-of-living location while living in lower-cost markets.

Nursing: By State

Nursing shows some of the most dramatic state-level salary differences of any profession:

Takeaway: Travel nursing (temporary contracts in high-demand states) is a well-established strategy for nurses to earn California wages while gaining diverse experience. Many new BSN graduates do 1–2 years of travel nursing before settling.

Engineering: By State

Engineering salary geography is shaped heavily by which industries dominate each state:

Business and Finance: By State

Finance roles concentrate heavily in a few metro areas:

Education: By State

Teaching salaries are almost entirely determined by state and district funding:

Takeaway: For education majors, state choice is arguably the single biggest financial decision of your career.

How to Factor Location Into Your Major Decision

  1. Research where your target industry concentrates. Find the 3–5 metros with the most job postings in your target field. That's where salaries are highest and job density is strongest.
  2. Use cost-of-living adjusters. A $95,000 salary in Austin goes farther than $130,000 in San Francisco. NerdWallet and CNN Money both have free cost-of-living calculators.
  3. Check remote work flexibility for your field. CS, data science, many business roles — increasingly negotiable from anywhere. Nursing, civil engineering, teaching — almost always require physical presence.
  4. Consider state licensing portability. Some professional licenses transfer easily across states (CPA, many engineering licenses with the PE exam). Others are more state-specific and create friction if you relocate.

Related guides

Take our free RIASEC quiz to narrow down which high-earning fields actually fit your interests — before worrying about geography.

Everyday Royalties Editorial — Salary data based on BLS OES and NACE surveys. Geographic ranges are approximate and reflect statewide or metro-area medians. Published March 2026