A survey conducted by the Pew Research Center found that 52% of workers are concerned about the impact of AI on the workplace. Additionally, nearly one-third believe it will result in fewer long-term job opportunities for them.
The AI-Resistant Careers Index from Resume Now has identified 20 high-paying jobs that are least likely to be replaced by automation. This index is based on data from the U.S. Department of Labor's O*NET database and salary information from Payscale. It evaluates three critical human skills: adaptability, stress tolerance, and self-control.
Given this information, here are four skills that are gaining value in 2026, along with the associated careers.
Careers: Surgeons, emergency physicians, nurse anesthetists
Healthcare roles consistently rank among the most resistant to automation because they require real-time judgment when situations change unexpectedly. A patient’s unforeseen reaction, a complication during surgery, or a diagnosis that deviates from the norm all demand immediate action, often without complete information. In these scenarios, no algorithm can make the necessary decisions.
The ability to make choices under pressure is becoming more valuable than having perfect information.
Careers: Cybersecurity analysts, financial managers, construction managers
AI performs well in stable, repeatable conditions. Many of today's most valuable roles operate in neither.
Cybersecurity threats shift in real time. Financial markets react to events that no model predicted. Construction projects encounter constant changes on the ground. The people who thrive in these fields share a common quality: they adjust quickly when conditions change rather than waiting for the situation to stabilize.
The World Economic Forum’s Future of Jobs Report identified adaptability and resilience among the fastest-growing required skills across industries through 2030.
Careers: CEOs, attorneys, senior leaders
AI can inform decisions. It cannot be held accountable for them.
Leadership roles resist automation not because they’re complex but because they require ownership. Strategic decisions affect employees, organizations, and people outside the room — and someone has to stand behind them regardless of how the data looked at the time. That accountability is not a burden AI can absorb.
Careers: Physicians, veterinarians, managers
AI can analyze language. Reading people is an entirely different skill.
Many AI-resistant roles involve working directly with individuals in moments that carry weight — managing a team through a difficult stretch, advising a client facing a major decision, or treating a frightened patient. These interactions require more than information. They require judgment about what the person in front of you actually needs, and the ability to respond to that.
Emotional intelligence remains among the hardest skills to automate and among the most sought-after.
The most secure and highest-compensated careers increasingly depend on skills that are difficult to automate: judgment under pressure, composure, adaptability, accountability, and the ability to work with people in high-stakes moments.
The advantage in 2026 will not come from competing with AI on speed or efficiency. It will come from developing the skills AI still cannot replicate.