Chiropractors
Income Percentile Results
Total Income of $55,000 ranks between the 35.3th and 45.3th percentiles for all education levels. These results were estimated off of 45,315 Chiropractors.
50th Percentile (Median) Income for any Education Level: $72,47975th Percentile: $120,027
95th Percentile: $324,756
99th Percentile: $466,370
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Income Percentile Stats
- To be in the top 1% for this age range, your household would need an income of $466,370 per year. This would include salary, investments, and any business income.
- To be in the top 5% for this age range, your household would need an income of $324,756 per year. This would include salary, investments, and any business income.
Income of Chiropractors by Highest Education Level
Total Income of $55,000 ranks for education levels:- Compared to Doctoral degree holders this ranks between the 35.9th and 46th percentiles.
- Compared to Professional degree beyond a Bachelor's degree holders this ranks between the 30.6th and 40.1th percentiles.
- Compared to Master's degree holders this ranks between the 49.6th and 65.5th percentiles.
- Compared to Bachelor's degree holders this ranks between the 47.2th and 59.3th percentiles.
- Compared to HS Diploma / GED degree holders this ranks between the 87.2th and 93.1th percentiles.
Income Percentile Distribution by Education Level
Highest Level of Education for Chiropractors:- Other (N/A or Less than HS): 0.5%
- HS Diploma / GED: 1.2%
- Associates Degree and Some College: 1.9%
- Bachelors Degree: 5.3%
- Masters Degree: 2.5%
- Professional Degree beyond a Bachelors: 52%
- Doctoral Degree (PHd) : 36.7%
Most Common Bachelors Degree Majors
- For Business undergraduate majors this income ranks between the 46.8th and 63.7th percentiles.
- For Biology and Life Sciences undergraduate majors this income ranks between the 58.9th and 64.6th percentiles.
- For Medical and Health Sciences and Services undergraduate majors this income ranks between the 51.2th and 68.2th percentiles.
- For Physical Sciences undergraduate majors this income ranks between the 75.9th and 75.9th percentiles.
- For Physical Fitness, Parks, Recreation, and Leisure undergraduate majors this income ranks between the 39.2th and 39.2th percentiles.
- For Social Sciences undergraduate majors this income ranks between the 50.8th and 50.8th percentiles.
- For Engineering undergraduate majors this income ranks between the 54th and 54th percentiles.
- For Communications undergraduate majors this income ranks between the 29.5th and 42th percentiles.
- For Family and Consumer Sciences undergraduate majors this income ranks between the 100th and 100th percentiles.
- For Engineering Technologies undergraduate majors this income ranks between the 0th and 0th percentiles.
Treemap of Undergraduate Majors
Methodology and Assumptions
This data was sourced from the person-level data recorded by the American Communities Survey. The version of the survey used was the most recent 5 year revision for data recorded from 2013-2017. These results represent 45,315 Chiropractors. The occupation code that was used to generate these results e was 3000 to read more about the occupation codes that the ACS and Census use. These results were generated in R using raw data from the ACS and precalculated in a batch. This data includes all individual income for the survey respondent, so some of the people may have a wage job as well as other income sources. I did not limit to wage income, because many occupations have high portions of entrepreneurs (CEOs, doctors, tradespeople).
Exclusions and Filters Applied:- Filtered for people who reported working at least 30 hours a week.
- High School Graduates and GED graduates were original 2 separate categories that I combined.
- Anything below High School Graduates is combined into a separate category. I did not include these on the page for space reason but I can. The data has data for associate degree holders and some college and these values are mostly in between the high school and bachelors samples. There doesn't seem to be a significant difference between some college and an associates degree.
- All ages are included and not separated. I did some initial testing and there is a difference if the data is split out by age, but I wasn't able to consolidate the data into a way that would make it fast to interact with and avoid being too complicated.
- There may be some confusion around a masters degree vs a professional degree beyond a masters. This was a distinction made in the original raw data that I decided to keep. Because the data is collected by polling people individually, some of the respondents may have mixed up the difference depending on how they phrased their response.
- Masters Degree : MBA, Masters in Something
- Professional Degree beyond a Bachelors Degree: Law Degree, Medical School, generally these degrees are credentials for specific careers.
- Doctoral Degree: PHd