Getting a bachelor’s degree is not for everyone. There’s the rising cost of living. And there’s student debt, which many professionals find themselves unable to afford several years post-graduation. Then there’s the likelihood that you’ll be unemployed and not able to integrate into the workforce even after graduating from a stellar degree program.
And beyond that, life has its own set of challenges.
Maybe your learning style was more hands-on and you preferred blue-collar trades work, or climbing your way up the ladder through gaining on-the-job experience. And learning as you earned. And that’s perfectly OK. You can still see a substantial salary increase even if you don’t have your bachelor’s degree.
What matters most are the role-specific, niche certifications that you possess. These prove your targeted expertise for specific skills and place you in the category of in-demand and highly sought-after talent.
The certifications listed in this article have been identified by LiveCareer analysts who based their findings on the Burning Glass Institute’s interactive Credential Value Index. This index evaluated outcomes “from 23,000 non-degree credentials to determine which moved the needle for workers. And it’s especially relevant for career changers, early career professionals, and job seekers looking to upskill without enrolling in college,” the report says.
Based on their findings, these are the top certifications for salary premiums without the cost of a three- to four-year degree:
7 Certificates To Boost Your Salary In 2025
1. Project Management Certification: +$6,500 annually | 38% non-BA earners
- Construction managers
- Project management specialists
2. Associate Certified Electronics Technician: +$4,300 annually | 48% non-BA earners
- Electrical and electronic engineering technologists and technicians
- Computer network architects
3. Certified Ethical Hacker (CEH): +$2,600 annually | 30% non-BA earners
- Computer systems analysts
- Computer user support specialists
4. Certified Coding Associate (CCA): +$2,500 annually | 30% non-BA earners
- Network and computer systems administrators
- Computer network architects
5. Check Point Certified Security Expert (CCSE): +$2,100 annually | 38% non-BA earners
- Sales engineers
- Information security analysts
6. Citrix Netscaler SD-WAN Certification (CC-SDWAN): +$1,800 annually | 34% non-BA earners
- Computer network support specialists
- Facilities managers
7. Check Point Certified Security Administrator (CCSA): +$1,700 annually | 33% non-BA earners
- Information security analysts
- Computer network support specialists
How To Include These Certifications In Your Resume
LiveCareer’s resident career expert Jasmine Escalera shares these simple tips for including these certifications in your resume:
1. Showcase certifications in a dedicated section on your resume.
Create a clearly labeled “certifications” or “professional development” section near the top of your resume (especially if the credential is relevant to your target role). List the full name of the credential, issuing organization, and date earned.
2. Reinforce your certification in your summary.
In your resume summary or personal profile, mention the certification to highlight it as a core qualification. Example: “Certified Project Management Professional (PMP®) with 3+ years of experience leading cross-functional teams in logistics and supply chain settings.”
3. Add skills that align with the certification.
Most certifications map to specific technical or soft skills. Add these to your “skills” section and use them to describe achievements in your work history. Example for CEH: “Utilized ethical hacking techniques to identify and resolve security vulnerabilities across cloud-based systems.”
4. Tailor your resume for job listings.
If a job description mentions a credential you hold—or the skills associated with it—mirror that language in your resume. This boosts your chances of passing through applicant tracking systems (ATS).
5. Mention certifications in your cover letter and interviews.
Certifications show initiative and up-to-date knowledge. Briefly explain how earning yours has made you more effective in your role or helped you grow professionally.
6. Keep them visible on social media profiles.
Don’t forget to list your certifications in the “licenses & certifications” section in your social media profiles. If available, include the credential URL so employers can verify it directly.
Other Ways To Boost Your Salary Without A Degree In 2025
Certifications aside, there are other ways you can bump up your salary without getting a degree, such as:
1. Upskill In AI
Become AI fluent and learn applied AI, where you apply agentic AI and generative AI tools to your specific domain of work to increase output and deliver higher value. This skill makes you in-demand amongst employers.
2. Leverage AI tools To Maximize Your Productivity
Use your AI fluency and role-specific tools to automate busy work, analysis, reporting, and other aspects of your role, where allowed.
3. Build A Strong Personal Brand
Share thought leadership insights on LinkedIn, Substack, Medium, etc. to attract potential clients, engage others in your space, and also attract the attention of recruiters and hiring managers. Posting thought leadership consistently could land you consulting gigs and paid speaking opportunities, as well as inbound job offers.
4. Monetize Your Skills
Don’t limit yourself to your job. Monetize the skills you already know and practice every day at work and turn them into digital products for passive income. You can also monetize them through offering paid freelance services, and you can make several thousand dollars a month doing this.
5. Use Market Data For Leverage
Regularly analyze your pay against salary data benchmarks using tools like Glassdoor, Levels.fyi or PayScale. Use these benchmarks to negotiate pay raises with your employer if they significantly fall below the standard.
6. Focus On Developing Career Multipliers
Skills like leadership, decision making, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, and storytelling are “career multipliers” because these power skills amplify your impact and get you further along in your career. They open doors for significantly lucrative opportunities into rooms that would traditionally be shut to you without a degree.
7. Job-Hop
In my career, I’ve observed that although job-hopping may be associated with stigma, it can actually work to your advantage. In my case, I had a good excuse: I was working on FTCs (fixed-term contracts) so when the contracts ended or were near their close, I had to find work elsewhere. Each time I moved to the next role, my salary increased incrementally. Within three years, I had moved up the pay scale and boosted my salary by an extra 50%.
While job-hopping is not for everybody, it is important to assess your options outside of your current employer, especially if you discover that their policies and management culture are holding you back from your full earning potential after evaluating and negotiating against benchmarks.
Ready to take your career to the next level? It may be October but it’s still never too late to take the first step towards upskilling and boosting your salary. Don’t wait for January to start your New Year’s Resolutions. Give yourself a headstart for the new year, and use this last quarter of 2025 to prep yourself professionally for larger and more lucrative career opportunities.