Top Occupations in PR by Political Donations

See which occupations donate the most in PR. 16 occupations, $789K in donations from PR.

The occupational breakdown of political donors in PR reflects the state's economic makeup. This ranking shows which professions contribute the most to federal campaigns from within PR, with both state-level and national totals provided for comparison. The mix of top occupations can differ substantially from one state to another based on local industries and workforce composition.

#OccupationPR TotalNational Total
1MEDIA$502K$1.7M
2COMERCIANTE$68K$69K
3ABOGADO$54K$68K
4MEDICAL DOCTOR$53K$1.8M
5MERCHANT$29K$497K
6CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT$16K$1.5M
7PUBLICIST$12K$360K
8HOUSE WIFE$11K$132K
9INSURANCE CONSULTANT$9K$216K
10HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGER$9K$105K
11SPECIAL ASSISTANT$8K$130K
12MORTGAGE LENDER$7K$88K
13PHARMACY$4K$115K
14HEDGE FUND MANAGER$3K$1.5M
15SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE$2K$67K
16ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE$2K$112K

Frequently Asked Questions

What occupations donate the most in PR?

The top political donors by occupation in PR typically include retirees, attorneys, executives, and physicians. Across 16 tracked occupations, PR residents have contributed $789K to federal campaigns.

Does PR's occupation mix differ from the national average?

Each state's occupational giving profile reflects its local economy. States with major financial centers see more banker and investor donations, while states with large university systems see more professor and researcher contributions. Compare the PR and National Total columns to spot these differences.

How are occupation categories determined?

Donors self-report their occupation on FEC contribution forms. We normalize common variations (e.g., "ATTORNEY" and "LAWYER" are combined) to produce cleaner rankings, though some inconsistency remains due to the self-reported nature of the data.

More PR Data

PR Overview Top ZIP Codes Top Cities Top Employers