Salary

Average Salary: $22,000

Expected Lifetime Earnings: $918,456


You won't make a lot of money as a swim instructor, but you could be saving lives. Plus you can work on your tan. (Source)

The money is steady but not very good. There are pockets of wealthy neighborhoods where an instructor might make a livable wage, but most of the time you'll have to get accustomed to $12 or $13 an hour (source).

However, if you can get a job with a posh country club as a lifeguard/swimming instructor or with a private swimming school, you can probably make a bit more, closer to $16 or $17 an hour (source). 

If you work at a summer camp, there's also end of the summer tips to look forward to from grateful parents, as well as future gigs as a private teacher in backyard swimming pools. That sort of work could run as high as $20 to $25 an hour, depending on the neighborhood.

Overall, you're looking at a yearly salary of between $18,000 and $38,000, not exactly enough to retire on (source). 

However, get a job coaching a swim team at a high school, along with maybe teaching a class or two, and you're looking at a teacher's salary in addition to $6,000 or more to coach the team. Plus you get a teacher's pension. You're looking at around $62,000 to start (source). That's certainly livable. 

A college swim coach would only make around $40,000 on average, which is not much better than teaching at the Y or at a camp. 

There are other kinds of swim coaching you can do if you're willing to get some education and certification for aquatic therapy. There are only a handful of schools that specialize in this, though some insurance companies will pay for an accredited aquatic therapist. 

Salary for an aquatic therapist is typically $63,000 (source). 

Many aquatic therapists also teach swimming to make even more money. Keep your options open, that money's got to come from somewhere.