Finance / Mathematics

Actuary

Use probability, statistics, and financial mathematics to measure and price risk for insurance companies, pension funds, and financial institutions. Consistently ranked one of the best jobs in America — strong pay, excellent job security, and an exam-based credential that doesn't require a specific degree.

Entry Pay (pre-Fellowship)
$65–85K
While passing exams
Associate (ASA/ACAS)
$90–130K
After ~5 exams
Fellow (FSA/FCAS)
$120–200K+
After all exams
Chief Actuary
$200–400K+
Senior leadership
Exam Count
7–10 exams
Over 5–10 years

What Actuaries Actually Do

Actuaries analyze the financial consequences of risk and uncertainty. They use mathematical models to predict the likelihood and cost of future events — deaths, accidents, natural disasters, illnesses — and use those predictions to help insurance companies set premiums, design products, and maintain the financial reserves required to pay future claims. They also work for pension funds, consulting firms, government agencies, and increasingly in banking and investment management.

The work is quantitative and detail-oriented — heavy on statistical modeling, data analysis, and financial projections. It is not flashy work, but it is intellectually rigorous and genuinely important: actuarial errors can mean an insurance company is insolvent or a pension fund can't pay retirees. The responsibility that comes with that is reflected in both the exam requirements and the compensation.

Why actuary consistently ranks as one of the best jobs

Job ranking publications (US News, CareerCast) consistently place actuarial science near the top of "best jobs" lists — combining strong median pay ($120,000+ for credentialed actuaries), low physical stress, high job security, and strong work-life balance relative to other high-paying finance careers. The demand for actuaries consistently outpaces supply, giving credentialed actuaries strong negotiating leverage and job security regardless of economic conditions.

The Two Actuarial Paths

Property & Casualty
Casualty Actuarial Society (CAS)

Covers property and casualty insurance — auto, home, commercial liability, workers' compensation. The CAS administers its own exam series (9 exams) leading to the ACAS (Associate) and FCAS (Fellow) credentials. P&C work is often more analytical and data-heavy, with growing demand in catastrophe modeling and climate risk.

Life, Health & Pensions
Society of Actuaries (SOA)

Covers life insurance, health insurance, retirement/pension, and investment risk. The SOA administers its exam series leading to ASA (Associate) and FSA (Fellow) credentials, with specialization tracks in retirement benefits, individual life/annuities, health/managed care, and investment/finance. The FSA finance/investment track has significant overlap with quantitative finance careers.

The Exam Path

1
Exams 1–2: Probability and Financial Mathematics
The first two exams are shared between CAS and SOA — Exam P (Probability) and Exam FM (Financial Mathematics). These test calculus-based probability and the time value of money. Study time: 150–200 hours each. Pass rates: 40–55%. Passing these exams before graduating is a major advantage in job searching.
2
Get your first actuarial job — pass exams while working
Most actuarial employers hire students or recent graduates who have passed 1–2 exams. Companies typically support exam study — providing paid study time, exam fee reimbursement, and salary increases upon passing each exam. The actuarial career is built around passing exams while working, not passing them all before starting.
3
Associate designation (ASA or ACAS) — 5–7 exams
The Associate designation is the first credentialing milestone — roughly 5–7 exams and modules over 3–5 years of work and study. Associate actuaries command significantly higher salaries than exam candidates. Many actuaries practice at the Associate level for their entire careers.
4
Fellow designation (FSA or FCAS) — remaining exams and modules
The Fellow designation is the highest actuarial credential — completing all exams, professional development modules, and an online course component. Fellowship typically takes 8–10 years total from starting exams. Fellow actuaries in leadership positions are among the highest-paid professionals in insurance and financial services.

What You Can Earn

Pay by credential level

0–2 exams passed (entry): $60,000–$80,000
3–5 exams passed: $75,000–$105,000
Associate (ASA/ACAS): $95,000–$140,000
Fellow (FSA/FCAS): $130,000–$200,000+
Chief Actuary / VP: $200,000–$400,000+

Each exam passed typically triggers a salary increase of $3,000–$8,000 at most employers. This incentive structure means actuaries who pass exams steadily see consistent income growth throughout their credential journey.

What Most People Get Wrong

Common assumption
"You need an actuarial science degree."
Any strong quantitative degree works — mathematics, statistics, economics, computer science, or engineering. The actuarial credential is exam-based, not degree-based. What matters is math ability (calculus-based probability and statistics) and passing the exams. Many practicing actuaries have degrees in non-actuarial fields.
Common assumption
"Actuarial work is boring number-crunching."
Senior actuaries are deeply involved in business strategy — pricing decisions, capital management, product development, mergers and acquisitions due diligence, and regulatory compliance. Chief actuaries present to boards of directors and influence major corporate decisions. The entry-level work is more technical; the senior-level work is more strategic and leadership-oriented.

Next Steps

1
Take Exam P (Probability) as soon as you're ready
Exam P is the entry point. Study materials from ACTEX and ASM are widely used. Passing Exam P opens the door to actuarial internships — do this before you graduate if possible.
2
Decide: CAS (P&C) or SOA (life/health/pensions)
The first two exams are shared. After that the paths diverge. P&C tends to be more data-science adjacent; SOA has broader specialization tracks. Research both before committing to a direction.
3
Pursue an actuarial internship during college
Insurance companies, consulting firms (Milliman, Towers Watson, Aon), and reinsurance companies all hire actuarial interns. An internship with 1–2 exams passed is very achievable and dramatically improves full-time job prospects.
Last updated: April 2026