University Professor Average Salary

University Professor Average Salary thumbnail
A professor individually advises a student.

A university professor may instruct undergraduate students, graduate students or both. A professor's salary depends on the institution, the geographic location and his specialty.

  1. National

    • According to a 2008-09 survey by the American Association of University Professors as shown by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the average salary for full-time faculty was $79,439.

    Rank

    • According to the BLS, as quoted from the AAUP 2008-09 survey, the average salary for professors was $108,749; associate professors earned $76,147; assistant professors earned $63,827; instructors earned $45,977; and lecturers earned $52,436.

    Institution

    • According to the AAUP 2008-09 faculty survey, Harvard University offered professors the highest average salary at $192,600. Other high-paying institutions were as follows: Stanford University at $181,900; Princeton University at $180,300; University of Chicago at $179,500; and Columbia University at $178,800.

    Subject

    • According to the BLS, professors in medicine, law, engineering and business earned more than professors in the humanities and education.

    Additional Work

    • The BLS reveals that many faculty members also have significant earnings on top of a base salary from work in research, consulting, teaching additional courses, writing for a publication or other employment.

    Benefits

    • In addition to a salary, many full-time professors receive benefits. According to the BLS, such benefits may include tuition waivers for dependents, access to campus facilities, housing, travel allowances and even paid leave for sabbaticals.

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  • Photo Credit discussion image by Valentin Mosichev from Fotolia.com

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