" I look for people on the internet who can do work specific business . I get paid a idiotic amount of money for the least endeavour possible . "

Whenever you think of well-paying careers, jobs like doctor and lawyer probably come to mind. However, there are a lot of professions you’ve probably never heard of — and you might be surprised to find out how much money you can make in those fields.

A while back, redditoru/yonBonbonbonasked, “What jobs pay surprisingly well that no one knows about?”

Here are 17 of the top (and coolest-sounding!) answers:

2.“Ethical hacker."

3.“I work in public relations, specializing in crisis management. If you need me, you REALLY need me. But most of the time, you don’t need me at all. So I make six figures a year to do nothing at all most days. Just rushing in to save the day maybe a couple of times a year at most.”

— u/[deleted ]

4.“Professional land surveyors. Due to the aging population of surveyors and no one really knowing exactly what they really do, the pay — once you’re licensed — is $90,000–$100,000 per year, and you can pretty much choose what part of the country you want to work in, as there are openings everywhere.”

— u / Spicy_weenie

5.“I cook for resource camps (tree planting, firefighting, I’ve done the odd oil rig or scientific expedition in the past), and I get paid an amazing day rate.”

6.“Braiding horses for hunter shows. It’s been a while since I did it, but at the top shows, I was getting around $100–$150 per horse. On a good day, I could do 10 horses.”

— u / WanderWomble

7.“Merchant marine officer. Bank money, no expenses, half the year on vacation. I travel for work to wild places.”

8.“Stilt walking. I make $450 an hour.”

— u / Easy_Carpenter4751

10.“A lot of medical technician jobs. I am a specialized ultrasound tech making $120,000 a year. I only have an associate degree.”

— u / Bigfryoncampus

11.“Programming in COBOL. A whole bunch of banks and investment companies and insurance companies have these 50-year-old databases programmed in COBOL, and if you know the language, you can make bank because it’s much cheaper for them to pay a COBOL developer $250,000 a year than to spend $30 million transferring all of their database info to some new spec.”

— atomic number 92 / transfemininemystiq

12.“Environmental consulting. I started in biology to go into conservation biology but couldn’t justify working for $15 an hour for 10 years. Hell, I’d never even heard of environmental consulting when I was doing my undergrad! Now, three years after graduating, I make over $100,000, still do conservation work (about 50% of the time), and don’t have to penny-pinch!”

— uranium / TheGreatPencil

13.“If you work in a state with recreational or medical cannabis, jobs in that field can be very lucrative. I’m currently in the field in Michigan. I can make my own schedule, typically working three to five days a week, and work environments tend to be very relaxed, as you might expect.”

— u/-voidface-

14.“Underwater welders. I was working in New Orleans shortly after Hurricane Katrina and met this Scotsman at a bar. He had been trained in underwater welding by the Royal Navy and was now helping the NOLA shipping companies repair their ships that had been damaged in port by the hurricane. He was being paid $600 an HOUR when in the water. An HOUR.”

15.“I’m a speech pathologist in central Kentucky. ‘Per diem’ or PRN jobs to cover vacations, maternity leaves, etc., pay $50–$60 hourly (that’s a lot in Kentucky, y’all), and you can choose your days or hours based on how much you want to work.”

16.“I look for people on the internet who can work specific jobs. I get paid a ridiculous amount of money for the least effort possible.”

17.And finally: “The traveling version of anything. If you have any skill that you are willing to drop everything and go do at a moment’s notice in some random place, you can get paid quite well.”

— u / PaulMckee

take down : Some submission have been edited for length and/or lucidity .

Close-up of Joe Exotic wearing a cap

A person typing at a keyboard with a small screen in front of it

Men and women dressed business casual and sitting at a table with notebooks, tablets, and laptops on it

A person outside looking through a small telescope

A person with a huge pile of ground meat in the kitchen

A person braiding a horse's hair

A person at the helm of a ship

A person in a clownish costume walking on stilts outside

A person purchasing some legal weed

A medical technician operating an ultrasound machine

An environmental consultant with a laptop in the field

Two workers in a cannabis store

A welder working underwater

A speech pathologist working with a child

A woman in a medical uniform with a stethoscope in a parking lot