Which Professions Attract Narcissists? What the Research Actually Says

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychopractitioner
11 min read

This article is available in French only.
In brief: some professions — executives, surgeons, political or media careers — show statistically higher average narcissistic-trait scores than the general population. But "higher average scores" means neither "everyone is a narcissist" nor "a personality disorder." This article separates what research actually establishes from sensationalist lists. If you are wondering about someone close to you, a self-assessment test can help you put words to what you observe — without making a diagnosis.

Have you ever felt that certain professional environments concentrate more difficult personalities — overconfident, self-centered, low on empathy? This intuition isn't pure imagination: several studies in organizational psychology have measured the so-called "dark triad" traits (narcissism, Machiavellianism, sub-clinical psychopathy) across sectors, and some patterns recur.

But the topic is sensitive. Confusing a personality trait with a disorder, or labeling an entire profession, turns knowledge into caricature. This dossier draws on published studies (and cites them precisely) to answer one simple question: which professions does research associate with higher narcissism, and why? Without judgment, and without ever diagnosing anyone from a distance.

Reminder: narcissistic traits or personality disorder?

The word "narcissistic" is used loosely. Clinically, it covers two very different realities.

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On one hand, narcissistic traits: confidence, need for recognition, ambition, a taste for leadership. Present in everyone to varying degrees, they can even be adaptive (a surgeon confident in their hands, an executive who owns hard decisions).

On the other, Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD), defined by the DSM-5-TR (2022): a pervasive, lasting pattern of grandiosity, need for admiration and lack of empathy, causing significant distress or impairment. Its prevalence in the general population is estimated between 0.5% and 6.2%, depending on the study and the criteria used.

Research also distinguishes two faces: grandiose narcissism (extraverted, dominant, status-seeking) and vulnerable narcissism (hypersensitive, anxious, resentful). Schermer et al. (2023) show that these forms gravitate toward different careers: the grandiose type seeks power and visibility, the vulnerable type tends to avoid them. When this article talks about "narcissistic professions," it means average trait scores — not a diagnosis, and certainly not every individual in a field.

Three precautions before any list

Before the details, three methodological safeguards to keep in mind throughout:

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  • Traits ≠ disorder. A high average score in a profession does not mean its members have NPD. The vast majority of executives, surgeons or lawyers are not pathological — they simply show, on average, more pronounced confidence traits.
  • Statistical ≠ individual. A group average says nothing about a specific person. Knowing someone's profession never allows a conclusion about their personality: this is the classic ecological fallacy.
  • Ambiguous causality. Do these jobs attract narcissistic profiles, or shape them (through selection, culture, power)? Both mechanisms likely coexist, and cross-sectional studies cannot settle the question.
  • The professions most cited by research

    A. Leadership and power

    Executives and CEOs. This is the most documented sector. Boddy (2015), in his work on "psychopaths as CEOs," describes an overrepresentation of dark-triad traits in leadership roles, where charisma, risk-taking and emotional detachment are sometimes rewarded. Mathieu et al. (2014) confirm the link between the dark triad and organizational leadership, while showing these traits degrade subordinates' well-being. Importantly: most executives are not concerned — it is the tail of the distribution that is overrepresented. Political careers. Hill & Yousey (1998), comparing four occupational groups, found politicians scored highest on narcissism, ahead of university faculty, clergy and librarians. A more recent analysis in Personality and Individual Differences (2025) on career choices and the dark triad points the same way: roles offering power, exposure and low accountability attract these profiles more. To nuance: public life also covers countless altruistic motivations. Lawyers (litigation, trial work). The literature on vocational interests and the dark triad (Jonason et al., 2014; Kowalski et al., 2017) places law — especially litigation and trial work — among the "enterprising" orientations correlated with narcissistic and Machiavellian traits: a taste for verbal combat, argumentative dominance and status. Again, this is an average tendency on vocational interests, not a verdict on a profession built largely on ethics and client service. Managers and administrators. Beyond CEOs, mid-level positions of hierarchical power appear in Mathieu et al. (2014) as terrain where narcissistic traits unfold: the ability to manage a team, control information and claim credit. The very structure of organizations may filter the most self-assured profiles upward, regardless of their actual empathy.

    B. Medical and scientific

    Surgeons. A comparative study in Nature Scientific Reports (2024), covering 1,390 surgeons, measured significantly higher grandiose narcissism in surgery than in other medical specialties. The authors read this as selection (self-confidence, stress tolerance, the ability to decide alone under pressure) rather than a moral flaw: these traits are partly functional in the operating room. The downside may concern communication and collegiality. Medical students. Several US studies report high narcissistic-trait scores from the early years of training — one study cites up to roughly 17% of marked-trait profiles in the first year. Interpretation stays cautious: entry selection, a competitive culture, and possible normalization over the curriculum. Nothing indicates a clinical disorder in these students. Aesthetic specialists. Research on vocational interests (Kowalski et al., 2017) and on self-image suggests an attraction to disciplines centered on appearance and visible results. To be handled with extra caution, as sample sizes are small: this is a lead, not an established certainty. Academics and faculty leaders. Hill & Yousey (1998) ranked university faculty second in their four-group comparison. The need for intellectual recognition, competition for prestige and expert status can feed grandiose traits — without saying anything, again, about the rigor or integrity of the vast majority of researchers and teachers.

    C. Visibility and performance

    Celebrities and performing arts. Performance careers attract profiles seeking attention and admiration: Kowalski et al. (2017) link narcissistic traits to "artistic" and "enterprising" interests oriented toward visibility. The stage offers exactly the "stage" grandiose narcissism seeks. This statistical link takes nothing away from the talent, work and sensitivity that creation demands. Influencers and social media. The literature on narcissism and social media describes a reinforcement loop: platforms reward (likes, followers, self-presentation) precisely what grandiose narcissism craves. Schermer et al. (2023) tie these "visibility" career orientations to the grandiose pole rather than the vulnerable one. Correlation is not causation: these tools may amplify traits without creating them. Journalists and exposure careers. Media roles, through public exposure and influence, are among the "enterprising/influence" orientations associated with dark-triad traits in vocational analyses (Jonason et al., 2014). The effect remains modest and highly heterogeneous across specialties: rigorous investigation does not share the profile of attention-seeking.

    D. Force and control

    Military. Some studies report a high proportion of narcissistic traits (around 20% of marked profiles in certain specific populations), linked to valued qualities: assurance, hierarchy, tolerance for danger. These traits are partly selected and trained, and do not constitute a disorder. Police. Papazoglou et al. (2019), on a sample of 1,173 police officers, document the presence of narcissistic traits and their interaction with occupational stress and burnout risk. The authors stress a functional reading (resilience, authority) as much as relational risks — not a stigmatization of the profession. Finance and trading. Mathieu et al. (2014) and Jonason et al. (2014) place finance and trading among environments where the dark triad is overrepresented: risk-taking, competition, the reward of boldness. Here too, sector culture matters as much as individual selection.

    Additional mentions

    Three domains recur in the literature without being as documented: the religious/spiritual sphere (Hill & Yousey, 1998, included clergy; positions of moral authority can attract or shelter grandiose profiles), entrepreneurship (a review in Frontiers in Psychology, 2021, describes a double-edged entrepreneurial narcissism: a driver of initiative, but a governance risk), and elite sport / coaching (where extreme confidence and the pursuit of performance can overlap with grandiose traits).

    What about underrepresented professions?

    The picture would be incomplete without its flip side. Hands-on care (caregivers, geriatric nurses), social work, early childhood and craftsmanship appear at the opposite end: they select and reward empathy, cooperation and quiet service, poorly compatible with a need for admiration. Schermer et al. (2023) indeed associate these "social" orientations with low grandiose-narcissism scores.

    The final nuance is essential: these data describe group averages on traits, not individuals or disorders. You will find honest, empathetic people in every "at-risk" profession, and difficult profiles in supposedly altruistic jobs. No profession makes someone narcissistic, and none immunizes against it.

    Why do these professions attract these profiles?

    Three mechanisms, not mutually exclusive, are proposed by research.

    Attraction (self-selection). According to Holland's (1978) theory of vocational personality types, people gravitate toward environments matching their personality. Kowalski et al. (2017) showed that dark-triad traits predict "enterprising" interests (power, influence) and "artistic" ones (visibility). Narcissistic profiles thus choose jobs that offer a stage and status. Reward. These sectors value precisely the behaviors grandiose narcissism produces: charisma, displayed confidence, ambition, the ability to decide without hesitation. What would be a flaw elsewhere becomes a perceived asset. Structural filtering. Boddy (2015) notes that organizations often promote to the top the most self-assured and conflict-indifferent individuals — not necessarily the most competent or ethical. Power, finally, can erode empathy: it does not merely attract, it transforms.

    How to recognize narcissistic traits at work or in a relationship?

    Recognizing observable signs is not diagnosing — only a professional can do that. A few markers described in the literature:

    • Constant need for admiration and difficulty tolerating criticism (disproportionate reactions, grudges).
    • Lack of empathy: others' needs are minimized or instrumentalized.
    • Self-overvaluation: exaggerated successes, failures blamed on others.
    The grandiose profile shows mostly in public (dominance, seduction, self-promotion); the vulnerable profile appears instead through hypersensitivity, resentment and a permanent sense of injustice — more discreet, but just as draining in a relationship.

    A recurring red flag: the contrast between public and private spheres — charm and generosity displayed outside, coldness, control or contempt at home. It is often this gap, more than an isolated behavior, that should alert you. To go further, see our guide to relational manipulation and the signs of coercive control.

    What to do if you encounter a narcissistic profile?

    At work: set clear, factual boundaries, document exchanges and decisions in writing, do not seek the person's validation, and lean on internal resources (HR, staff representatives, occupational health). The goal is not to "win" against them, but to protect yourself. In a personal relationship: naming what you experience is the first step. A self-assessment tool can help clarify your observations, then a professional (psychologist, psychotherapist) can support you. Avoid the classic trap: trying to "fix" or "cure" the other. You cannot change someone's personality through love or patience; you can, however, protect your own.
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    Disclaimer. This article is informational and does not replace medical or psychological advice. It allows no diagnosis, of yourself or others: only a qualified health professional can assess a personality disorder. The associations between professions and traits describe statistical group tendencies, never individuals. If you are in danger in a relationship: in France, domestic-violence helpline 3919 (free, anonymous, 24/7); emergencies 112; suicide prevention 3114. Elsewhere, contact your local emergency services.

    Sources

    • American Psychiatric Association (2022). DSM-5-TR — Narcissistic Personality Disorder criteria.
    • Boddy, C. R. (2015). Psychopathic Leadership / Psychopaths as CEOs. Journal of Business Ethics.
    • Hill, R. W. & Yousey, G. P. (1998). Adaptive and maladaptive narcissism among university faculty, clergy, politicians, and librarians. Current Psychology.
    • Jonason, P. K. et al. (2014). The Dark Triad traits and career/vocational interests. Personality and Individual Differences.
    • Kowalski, C. M. et al. (2017). The Dark Triad and vocational interests. Personality and Individual Differences.
    • Mathieu, C. et al. (2014). Dark Triad traits in organizational leadership. Personality and Individual Differences.
    • Papazoglou, K. et al. (2019). Study on narcissism and stress among 1,173 police officers.
    • Schermer, J. A. et al. (2023). Grandiose vs vulnerable narcissism and career orientations.
    • Nature Scientific Reports (2024). Exploring grandiose narcissism among surgeons (n = 1,390).
    • Personality and Individual Differences (2025). Dark triad and career choices.
    • Frontiers in Psychology (2021). Review on narcissism and entrepreneurship.

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    Gildas Garrec, Psychopraticien TCC

    About the author

    Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner

    Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 1000 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Serenite. Contributor to Hugging Face and Kaggle.

    📚 16 published books📝 1000+ articles🎓 CBT certified

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    Which Professions Attract Narcissists? What the Research Actually Says | CBT Therapist Nantes | Psychologie et Sérénité