The tech industry has one of the widest gaps between perception and reality when it comes to degrees. Many people assume all tech jobs require a computer science degree. Many others assume a 3-month bootcamp guarantees a $100k job. Neither is true. This guide explains what actually happens — and what a realistic path into tech looks like without a degree.
Which tech jobs genuinely hire without a degree
- EntryIT Support Specialist / Help Desk$40k–$70kMost accessible entry point · CompTIA A+ or Google IT Cert · 3–6 months to qualify
- Entry–MidCybersecurity Analyst$65k–$115kHigh demand · CompTIA Security+ widely required · 6–12 months to qualify
- Entry–MidData Analyst$50k–$90kSQL + Excel + visualization tools required · Google Data Analytics Cert + portfolio
- Entry–MidWeb Developer (Front-end)$55k–$90kPortfolio-driven hiring · HTML, CSS, JavaScript, one framework · 6–12 months self-study
- Entry–MidCloud Support Associate$60k–$95kAWS or Azure certification · 4–6 months to qualify
- MidUX Designer$65k–$105kPortfolio is everything · Google UX Certificate + Figma proficiency · 6–10 months
What employers actually look for beyond the certification
A portfolio that proves you can do the work
In tech hiring without a degree, the portfolio replaces the diploma as the primary credibility signal. For IT support: document a home lab setup. For data: publish an analysis of a real dataset on GitHub or Kaggle. For UX: show a full case study from problem statement to tested prototype. For web development: deploy 2–3 live projects with visible source code.
Specific tool proficiency
Job listings in tech are specific. “Proficient in SQL” means you will be tested on SQL. Generic certifications without tool-specific evidence rarely make it past screening.
Professional presence
A complete LinkedIn profile with your certifications, projects, and a clear headline matters. Recruiters actively search for candidates — a sparse profile means you won’t appear in results. GitHub activity for developers signals consistent work over time.
Certifications that employers recognize most
Honest caveats
Entry-level tech salaries vary significantly by region. Remote roles can bridge geographic pay gaps, but competition for fully remote entry-level positions is high. Some large tech companies have removed degree requirements — this means they will consider you without one, not that a degree is no longer an advantage when all else is equal.