20 of the fastest-growing occupations in the U.S.

The nurse puts on gloves in a hospital room.
Rawpixel.com from AdobeStock

While the U.S. economy has seemingly teetered on the edge of a recession over the last year, there is some good news for workers: job growth hasn't been completely stunted. 

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the number of jobs will increase by 8.3 million by 2031. But different occupations — a term for a broad category of jobs that share similar skills, education or training — are bound to grow at different rates. USAFacts, a non-partisan and non-profit organization dedicated to providing data and research on U.S. issues, ranked the top 20 occupations for projected job growth. 

Nurse practitioners came in first, with demand estimated to increase by nearly 46%. Overall, healthcare support occupations are predicted to grow the fastest, gaining 924,000 jobs and employing 4.6 million workers in 2031. 

Read more: Employees are fleeing finance, insurance and manufacturing due to to burnout

"One thing that stands out when looking at the occupations with the highest projected growth and the occupations that will add the most total jobs is there are many jobs in healthcare fields," says Nate Johnold, marketing manager at USAFacts. "This could be due to the fact that our population is getting older. As both the baby boomer population and current healthcare workers age, the country will have a growing need for healthcare workers."

However, healthcare workers aren't the only ones in high demand; taxi drivers, restaurant cooks and theater ushers also made the list, hinting at an economy that needs to be professionally diverse to thrive.

Here are the 20 occupations with the highest projected growth by 2031. 

Nurse practitioners

Demand will grow by 45.7%

Read more: 10 careers with the most remote work flexibility

Wind turbine service technicians

Demand will grow by 44.3%

Ushers, ticket takers and lobby attendants

Demand will grow by 40.5%

Motion picture projectionists

Demand will grow by 40.3%

Restaurant cooks

Data scientists

Demands will grow by 35.8%

Athletes

Demand will grow by 35.7%

Information security analysts

Demand will grow by 34.7%

Statisticians

Umpires, referees and other sports officials

Demand will grow by 31.7%

Web developers

Demand will grow by 30.3%

Animal caretakers

Demand will grow by 29.9%

Choreographers

Demand will grow by 29.7%

Taxi drivers

Demand will grow by 28.5%

Read more: 4 reasons Americans are unprepared for retirement

Medical and health services managers

Demand will grow by 28.3%

Logisticians

Demand will grow by 27.7%

Physician assistants

Demand will grow by 27.6%

Read more: 10 best and worst states for healthcare coverage

Solar photovoltaic installers

Demand will grow by 27.2%

Animal trainers

Demand will grow by 27.1%

Physical therapist assistants

Demand will grow by 26.5%
MORE FROM EMPLOYEE BENEFIT NEWS