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— Occupational IQ research

Average IQ of Court Reporters: 107

Average IQ
107
Percentile
68th
Category
Law
Strongest axes
verbal, executive, pattern

Court Reporters show an average IQ of approximately 107, placing the median practitioner at the 68th percentile of the general adult population — the top 32%. This estimate is derived from occupational sampling studies, GRE/SAT score conversions for entry-level practitioners, and meta-analyses of cognitive ability data by profession.

Why Court Reporters cluster at this IQ level

The profession selects for, and then trains, the cognitive abilities required to do the work. Court Reporters show particular strength in verbal, executive, pattern — the cognitive axes that most predict performance in this field. These traits cluster because the work itself demands them and because entry filters (degrees, exams, certifications, interviews) screen for them.

Within the law field, Court Reporters sit relatively around average compared to peers. The standard deviation within the occupation is typically 10-15 IQ points, meaning roughly two-thirds of working Court Reporters fall in the IQ 92-122 band.

Cognitive demands of the work

The IQ figure for Court Reporters reflects the cognitive load of the actual job:

ProfessionAvg IQPercentile
Lawyer12192th
Judge12495th
Patent Attorney12897th
Paralegal11381th
Mediator11990th
Court Reporters10768th
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Take a 20-minute calibrated test and see how you compare across all six cognitive axes — including the ones Court Reporters score highest on.

What this average does NOT mean

An occupational IQ average is a statistical mean, not a hiring criterion. 107-level cognition is the typical Court Reporter, not the minimum. Plenty of working Court Reporters score below 92, succeeding through experience, conscientiousness, deep domain knowledge, and motivation — none of which IQ tests measure.

The average also describes the people who entered and stayed in the profession. It does not predict whether you specifically could succeed as a court reporter. Personal interest, work ethic, and circumstance matter at least as much.

How to read your own IQ against the Court Reporter average

Frequently asked

What is the average IQ of a court reporter?

The estimated average IQ for Court Reporters is 107, based on occupational sampling and GRE-derived data. This corresponds to roughly the 68th percentile.

Do you need a high IQ to be a court reporter?

There is no formal IQ requirement. The 107 average reflects who tends to enter and stay in the profession, not a minimum threshold. Successful Court Reporters exist well above and below this number.

What's the highest-IQ profession?

Physicists, mathematicians, and astronomers cluster around 131-132 average IQ. The top tier of professions are within 3-4 IQ points of each other.

Other law careers

Related reading

Sources: Hauser, R. (2002), Meritocracy, cognitive ability, and the sources of occupational success; Gottfredson, L. (1997), Why g matters: The complexity of everyday life, Intelligence 24(1); U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Outlook Handbook.

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