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Salary isn't that greatly dependent on your qualifications. You can have all the relevant Actuarial Part III qualifications but your salary is hugely dependent on your experience and value to the company.Says the accountant lol
Actuarial grads get a pretty comfortable salary upon graduating. However, you can obtain a much greater salary pretty quickly. If you've completed your part II exemptions upon graduating, you should be able to expect ~$150k in a few years time. The salary that an actuary earns upon completing part III is the "high actuarial salary" that most people talk about, which can be around $300k.
Source: Graduating tutor (actuarial), my former finance tutor working as a management consultant alongside actuaries, graduates from Finity consulting and Optiver at networking events and executives within actuarial society.
I don't like being a wanker with 'sources', but I don't really want to start an argument on BoS over something as meaningless as graduate salaries, so I thought I'd best put it in this post.
I have no idea who your networks are but all the actuaries I know who completed their Part III's rarely even get $150k+ salaries unless they've had experience for at least 5+ years.
Also, $300k is pretty ridiculous (and I daresay exaggerated) and only makes sense if you're the Appointed Actuary of a large insurance company (which takes at least 10+ years of experience to get to and very few people actually can claim to be that).