The Top 20 U.S. Jobs Where Workers Have More School Than Their Roles Require

Jasmine Escalera
By Jasmine Escalera, Career ExpertLast Updated: March 26, 2026
Overeducated person with a graduation cap next to books, computer, and degrees.

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The American workforce is increasingly educated. In many entry-level roles, that can mean workers bring more schooling than the job formally requires, creating a mismatch between training and opportunity.

MyPerfectResume’s Overeducated Workforce Report 2026 analyzed data from the U.S. Census Bureau and Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) to identify the jobs most affected by this “credential creep.” In some occupations, more than nine out of 10 workers exceed the formal educational requirement for their role.

This surge in overeducation and degree creep for particular jobs reveals how the labor market has evolved since the Great Recession. As college enrollment grew and employers began using degrees as a screening tool, credential inflation spread to industries that once offered accessible, on-the-job pathways for workers without degrees.

Key Findings

  • Overeducation is the norm. Between 69% and 98% of workers in low-barrier jobs have more schooling than their positions require.
  • “Some college” dominates. In many service and retail occupations, the largest share of workers fall into the “some college” category, despite no degree being required.
  • Degrees are common in no-credential jobs. Lifeguards, bartenders, attendants, and postal workers increasingly hold bachelor’s or higher degrees.
  • Wages lag behind credentials. Median pay in these jobs generally ranges from $29,000 to $40,000, well below what many degree holders expect to earn.
  • Service and sales lead the mismatch. Hospitality, retail, recreation, and postal work show the highest concentration of overeducated employees.

Why It Matters

Overeducation can signal wasted potential for both workers and employers. College-educated workers in low-skill jobs often report lower satisfaction, weaker wage growth, and slower career advancement. Meanwhile, businesses may experience higher turnover when employees feel stuck in roles that do not match their capabilities.

At the same time, degree inflation makes it harder for those without college experience to enter the workforce, limiting mobility and widening inequality. Understanding where this mismatch is greatest illuminates broader labor-market inefficiencies that policymakers and employers can address.

The 20 Most Overeducated Jobs in America

The following roles highlight the disconnect between educational attainment and job requirements. Each includes the required credential, on-the-job training, required prior experience, percentage of workers overeducated, and median annual pay.

1. Lifeguards, Ski Patrol, & Recreational Protective Service Workers

These jobs attract college students and graduates seeking seasonal or part-time work. With 98% of workers exceeding the requirement, they’re the most overeducated group in America.

2. Postal Service Workers (Carriers, Clerks, Sorters, & Operators)

Once a stable middle-class occupation accessible to high school graduates, the postal service now employs a majority of workers with college experience or degrees.

3. Telemarketers

Despite automation and the decline in call-center jobs, telemarketing remains a fallback for educated workers unable to secure roles matching their qualifications.

4. Physical Therapist Aides

These support positions often attract college students preparing for advanced healthcare degrees, resulting in overqualification rates exceeding 95%.

5. Motion Picture Projectionists

Even in the entertainment sector, workers with college degrees dominate simple technical roles that were once learned entirely on the job.

6. Amusement & Recreation Attendants

From theme-park staff to gym attendants, most employees bring schooling far beyond what their jobs demand.

7. Bartenders

Bartending increasingly serves as a stopgap for graduates struggling to enter higher-paying professions, which helps explain the strong presence of bartending programs.

8. Shampooers

Low barriers to entry and flexible schedules make salon support roles a common destination for those with unused education.

9. Hosts & Hostesses (Restaurant, Lounge, or Coffee Shop)

Despite the low pay, nearly all hosts and hostesses have at least a high school diploma, and many have college experience.

10. Ushers, Lobby Attendants, & Ticket Takers

In theaters and event venues, customer-service roles now feature a highly educated workforce performing largely routine tasks.

11. Cashiers

Automation hasn’t eliminated cashier jobs—but it has concentrated them among overqualified workers seeking stable hours.

12. Advertising Sales Agents

Sales remains a field where formal credentials aren’t required, yet over half of workers hold bachelor’s degrees.

13. Motor Vehicle Operators, All Other

Ranging from delivery drivers to shuttle operators, these roles often attract mid-career workers displaced from other fields.

14. Baggage Porters & Bellhops

Tourism jobs increasingly employ degree-holders seeking flexibility or supplemental income in service industries.

15. Parking Attendants

Even roles centered on simple logistics and customer service now attract workers with college experience.

16. Receptionists & Information Clerks

Front-desk and administrative positions often serve as entry points for degree-holders hoping to move into management or communications.

17. Hotel, Motel, & Resort Desk Clerks

Hospitality jobs, once tailored to students or early-career workers, are now heavily populated by graduates with limited advancement opportunities.

18. Counter & Rental Clerks

Retail rental and service counters remain low-skill in design but are staffed by an overeducated majority.

19. Retail & Parts Salespersons

A cornerstone of the service economy, retail increasingly attracts workers with college backgrounds, raising expectations without commensurate pay increases.

20. Couriers & Messengers

Even delivery roles, long considered accessible entry-level work, exhibit high rates of overeducation, reflecting intense competition for low-skilled jobs.


For press inquiries, please contact Nathan Barber at nathan.barber@bold.com

Methodology

The findings in this report are based on data from multiple government sources, including the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey (ACS) 2022, Table S2401 (educational attainment by detailed occupation), and the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Employment Projections Table 5.4 (typical education, work experience, and on-the-job training requirements), as well as the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) 2023 for median annual wages.

To identify overeducation, researchers compared the typical entry-level education requirement for each occupation, as reported by the BLS, with the actual educational attainment of workers in that occupation, as reported by the ACS.

Workers whose education exceeded the BLS minimum requirement were classified as “overeducated.” For example, a bartender position that requires no formal credentials counts any worker with a high school diploma or higher as overeducated. In contrast, roles requiring a high school diploma count anyone with some college, an associate’s degree, or higher as overeducated.

The analysis included only occupations that required no prior work experience and either short-term or moderate-term on-the-job training, excluding those that required apprenticeships, internships, or extensive professional experience.

For each qualifying occupation, the share of workers with education above the level required was summed to calculate the Overeducated Rate (%), and the top 20 occupations were ranked. Median wage data were drawn from the 2023 OEWS dataset to provide context on pay levels within each role.

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