PlotFuture PlotFuture
PlotFuture / Careers / Database Administrators

Database Administrators

Also known as: Database Administration Manager, Database Administrator (DBA), Database Analyst, Database Coordinator, Database Engineer
median $104,62010-yr demand -0.7%AI exposure 33/100typical entry Bachelor's degree
Database Administrators is well paid, AI barely touches it so far, and demand is steady.

The full pay distribution

Not one number — the spread from the bottom 10% to the top 10% of filed salaries.

Where it pays the most

Median salary by metro — the bar in amber is the U.S. median for comparison.

How pay grows with experience

From entry to expert, by reported wage level.

How exposed is it to AI?

Two things matter: how much AI is actually used in the role today (right), and how much it could automate in theory (up). AI is already widely used here.
Each faint dot is another occupation. The amber dot is Database Administrators — its position tells you whether the disruption is here yet or still over the horizon.
used today 33/100 automatable in theory 94/100 archetype The Epicenter

If AI does come for this job — where could you go?

Adjacent careers ranked by how much safer + how much more they pay, and the skill gap to get there. Click any to see its full breakdown.

Which majors lead here

College paths that commonly feed this career — see each one's full outcomes.
Computer And Information Sciences, General
CIP 11.01
see major →
Computer Software And Media Applications
CIP 11.08
see major →
Computer/Information Technology Administration And Management
CIP 11.10
see major →
How this is built. Median pay and the full distribution come from filed U.S. wage data (BLS OEWS + DOL/LCA filings); AI exposure blends O*NET task content with model-based automation potential; escape routes are computed from skill overlap between occupations, then ranked by how much safer + better-paid the move is. This joins real distributions and projects them forward — it needs the real distributions and the skill graph, not a guess. Figures describe group medians and trends, not any one person's outcome.