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Would you rather be a dentist or engineer?
It's funny you made this post because I started out college wanting to be an engineer and then I changed to pre-dent. I big thing I noticed with engineering is it is a lot of work in undergrad and the jobs are usually not that great (good but not great for the amount of effort you put into the degree, unless you enjoy doing engineering stuff which I don't think I do.) I think dentistry, for me at least, will be much more satisfying in that I will be working with and helping people all day instead doing engineering stuff. Not to mention the 6 figure salary dentists get.
Although dentistry is overall a lot of work, 8 years of school vs. 4 years (5 with internships) engineering is more tedious in my eyes compared to the more social communication based work environment of dentists.
Engineers put in so much work to become specialized and in our current economy large corporations make them highly dispensable. Once a company no longer needs your services or doesn't want to give you a pay raise, they are going to cut you.So true. When dentists have fun we have fun 😀 cuz we have the money.
Engineers put in so much work to become specialized and in our current economy large corporations make them highly dispensable. Once a company no longer needs your services or doesn't want to give you a pay raise, they are going to cut you.
I thought I was for sure going to be a biomedical engineer, but I then realized that thats not what I wanted and I became very interested in dentistry. I think the independence and directly helping people helped my decisionWould you rather be a dentist or engineer?
I think you may be confusing dentistry with pharmacy. Dentistry is not saturated at all from what I have seen, Pharm on the other hand is.Isn't dentistry very saturated right now? Dentistry forums don't look so hot now and it's only going to get worse. IMO it's even harder to get a job now than it is for engineers. There arent many positions for engineering positions but business or finance positions for engineers seem to be open. Can't speak for engineering but healthcare jobs are becoming more and more difficult to find. I suppose a need for good ethical nurses is always there but it's not very rosy anymore.
Everything is saturated. Yes, Dentistry too. Dentist pay more and have better job stability though vs engineers though. So i'd choose dentistry. Engineering is probably more saturated than dentistry though. In the private sector of engineering you get paid more but if your company does not have projects you can get let go like that. I heard horror stories of people with Masters in Engineering degrees from well known schools who are now not working in engineering anymore because they can't find jobs after being let go. If you work for the gov't better job security, lower base pay (GS payscale) but awesome benefits.
Don't let this scare you. Work hard, make connections, set yourself apart. The above poster said pharmacy is saturated - it is, but somehow I managed to get a high paying job and had offers in places I wanted to live. Bottom line, don't do something just for the money. Do something you're good at and passionate about.
Dentistry is saturated in many urban cities. If you really wanted to work there, you'd take a big pay cut and be paid an engineer's salary. Typical take home salary that practice owners aim for is around $200K. A new graduate trying to work in a big saturated city will probably have to work multiple part time jobs and will most likely not break six figures (take home) for a while. Getting to the point of living like a dentist will take many years after dental school depending on how much you borrow in student loans and in buying a practice. The challenge for someone in your position would be getting into an affordable state school. The difference in cost between a state school and a private school can be astronomical. An extreme example would be a Texas school graduate with less than $90K in loans versus a graduate from USC with >$400K in loans. Someone with $400K in loans will end up having $500K in loans by the time they graduate. By the time they pay it off in ten years, they'll have paid $600K while having made very little income during those ten years. If you pay it off in 20-30 years, that $400K will grow close to a $900K. Depending on whether you end up at a state school or a private school, dentistry may not be a more lucrative field than engineering in the short term.
to be honest, everything job you can think of is very saturated so just do something you enjoy doing and the rest will take care of itself if you're good at what you do. That's my 2 cent 🙂
i dont know where you live but i live in Canada in Vancouver BC. Secondly, im not gonna start from scratch for sure, im going to buy a developed dental practice from another dentist so i can start making big bucks from the day i start, unless i do a ****** job then everyone will leave but otherwise i will be making more than six figures.
So true. When dentists have fun we have fun 😀 cuz we have the money.
Hahaha, oh boy. You're in for a rude awakening. G/Li dont know where you live but i live in Canada in Vancouver BC. Secondly, im not gonna start from scratch for sure, im going to buy a developed dental practice from another dentist so i can start making big bucks from the day i start, unless i do a ****** job then everyone will leave but otherwise i will be making more than six figures.
Hahaha, oh boy. You're in for a rude awakening. G/L
Too much to elaborate on. If you end up deciding to do dentistry over engineering, business, etc, then you'll eventually come across inflated salaries and their discussion.How so?
Too much to elaborate on. If you end up deciding to do dentistry over business, then you'll eventually come across inflated salaries and their discussion.
just do well in undergrad, keep all your options open.I've decided dentistry already. What's salary inflation?
just do well in undergrad, keep all your options open.
Too much to elaborate on. If you end up deciding to do dentistry over engineering, business, etc, then you'll eventually come across inflated salaries and their discussion.
OkI dont think the salary would be crazy different for dentistry as it is not a salaried job. It's more like how much u are going to work. Plus if u own your own practice or buy it off from another dentist, u can easily make 200k+ like ive mentioned! unless u suck and no one comes to your clinic 😛
It was only meant to say, if you're sole objective is to make money (seems to be the topic of your threads), do business. Sure, an established dentist makes a good salary, but look at all the debt. School loans, practice loans, etc. food for thought.Idk but when u tell me stuff like that, it makes me worried so yea.
It was only meant to say, if you want to make money, do business. Sure, an established dentist makes a good salary, but look at all the debt. School loans, practice loans, etc. food for thought.
Haha, well, good. Keep that in mind when you start to crunch the numbers.Oh thats what u meant... Lol sorry i misunderstood. Yea but business will only give u can ok life. I think that in the long run after the paying off debt part which doesn't take long if u actually save and pay, dentistry would be better if u have dreams like me. 🙂
Haha, well, good. Keep that in mind when you start to crunch the numbers.
Dentists get payed WAY. More than engineers 🙂 just saying