52 Olympic Athletes Who Have "Normal" Jobs To Support Their Dreams

Imagine your dentist being like, "Sorry, I need to move your appointment. I'm in the Olympics!"

Reaching the Olympic level in any sport takes a huge amount of time — and money. Athletes have to pay for years of training, equipment, travel between competitions, etc. While some are able to make a living as full-time professional athletes, others work a secondary job to support their dreams.

Here are 52 Team USA athletes who have "normal" jobs:

Note: This won't include all of the hockey players who are PWHL and NHL pros!

1. During the off-season, alpine skier Keely Cashman works as a barista at the coffee shop her family owns, the Serene Bean.

  Mattia Ozbot / Getty Images
Mattia Ozbot / Getty Images

2. Curler Tara Peterson is a dentist in White Bear Lake, Minnesota.

  Stacy Revere / Getty Images
Stacy Revere / Getty Images

3. Curler Tabitha Peterson Lovick (who's Tara's older sister) is a pharmacist.

  Lintao Zhang / Getty Images
Lintao Zhang / Getty Images

4. Alpine skier Ryan Cochran-Siegle is employed at Cochran's Slopeside Syrup, which is the maple syrup shop his family runs.

  Alexis Boichard/Agence Zoom / Getty Images
Alexis Boichard/Agence Zoom / Getty Images

5. Pairs figure skater Danny O'Shea is a realtor and pairs skating coach.

  Jamie Squire / Getty Images
Jamie Squire / Getty Images

6. When snowboarder Cody Winters was only 18, he started his own company called Winters Window Washing, which he continues to run during the summer.

  NurPhoto / NurPhoto via Getty Images
NurPhoto / NurPhoto via Getty Images

Related: Olympians Are Showing Off Their Rooms At The Winter Games, And Simone Biles Has Reacted

7. Curler Rich Ruohonen is a personal injury attorney. He's a partner at his firm, where he specializes in representing victims of car accidents and traumatic brain injuries.

  David Berding / Getty Images
David Berding / Getty Images

8. In the summer, alpine skier Paula Moltzan works as a whitewater rafting guide so that she and her husband, Ryan Mooney (who's also her ski technician), can afford to travel during the ski season.

The rafting company she works for is owned by her in-laws.
GEORG HOCHMUTH / APA/AFP via Getty Images

The rafting company she works for is owned by her in-laws.

9. Freestyle skier Chris Lillis teaches piano and guitar lessons in Park City, Utah.

  David Ramos / Getty Images
David Ramos / Getty Images

10. During the off-season, luger Jonny Gustafson works various service jobs. It helps him decompress from training and stay busy.

  Picture Alliance / dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images
Picture Alliance / dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images

11. Curler Danny Casper is a business development consultant who has a degree in strategic communications.

  Rock Channel Curling / Via youtube.com
Rock Channel Curling / Via youtube.com

12. Pairs figure skater Emily Chan is a figure skating coach at The Skating Club of Boston.

  Minas Panagiotakis / Getty Images
Minas Panagiotakis / Getty Images

13. Snowboarder Nick Baumgartner worked pouring concrete before becoming a gold medalist at the 2022 Olympic Games in Beijing.

  Matthew Stockman / Getty Images
Matthew Stockman / Getty Images

14. Bobsledder Boone Niederhofer is a production engineer in the oil and gas industry.

Joe Scarnici / Getty Images for USOPC, Maddie Meyer / Getty Images

15. Alpine skier Nina O'Brien earned her economics degree from Dartmouth, and she has a finance job at a private equity firm.

  Millo Moravski/Agence Zoom / Getty Images
Millo Moravski/Agence Zoom / Getty Images

16. Ice dancer Madison Chock is a fashion designer for other figure skaters. Her business is called Madison Chock Design. In the 2024–25 season, the look she designed for Spanish skater Olivia Smart won the ISU's Best Costume.

  Scott Taetsch / Getty Images
Scott Taetsch / Getty Images

17. Snowboarder Nathan Pare spends the off-season doing residential construction work, which helps fund his athletic career.

  Millo Moravski/Agence Zoom / Getty Images
Millo Moravski/Agence Zoom / Getty Images

18. Skeleton athlete Dan Barefoot is a landscape architect.

  Joe Scarnici / Getty Images for USOPC
Joe Scarnici / Getty Images for USOPC

19. Speedskater Clayton DeClemente has a job in the concession stand at the Olympic Oval in Salt Lake City. He balances his training with up to four shifts a week.

  Elsa - International Skating Uni / International Skating Union via Getty Images
Elsa - International Skating Uni / International Skating Union via Getty Images

20. Alpine skier Sam Morse is a registered Maine Guide, which permits him to lead wilderness trips and similar experiences. He's also the founder of FAST (Faith and Ski Training) Camps, which, per the official website, aims "to strengthen the skiing skills and faith of young ski racers through coaching and community."

  Millo Moravski/Agence Zoom / Getty Images
Millo Moravski/Agence Zoom / Getty Images

21. Curler Ben Richardson is a cellist. He studied at the Cleveland Institute of Music.

  Chung Sung-Jun / Getty Images
Chung Sung-Jun / Getty Images

22. For five years, cross-country skier Jack Young had a summer job at Cajun's snack bar.

  Grega Valancic/VOIGT / Getty Images
Grega Valancic/VOIGT / Getty Images

23. Cross-country skier Hailey Swirbul started coaching at Alaska Pacific University in 2025. Initially, she coached the junior program, and now, she also coaches the elite program.

  Federico Modica/NordicFocus / Getty Images
Federico Modica/NordicFocus / Getty Images

24. Curler Aidan Oldenburg is an environmental scientist. His focus is on wind and solar project permits.

25. Singles figure skater Andrew Torgashev works as a coach at Great Park Ice.

  Matthew Stockman / Getty Images
Matthew Stockman / Getty Images

26. Freestyle skier Dylan Walczyk partnered with instructor Michael Schaefer to co-found Steezy Joe Network, an online platform "where bump skiing is king, the vibe is chill, and the music takes you back to the golden era of skiing." They create instructional videos about mogul skiing on social media.

  David Ramos / Getty Images
David Ramos / Getty Images

27. Curler Korey Dropkin is a realtor in northern Minnesota and Wisconsin.

  Stacy Revere / Getty Images
Stacy Revere / Getty Images

28. Ice hockey player Kendall Coyne Schofield voiced a hockey announcer in the Pixar movie Inside Out 2. She also runs the Schofield Family Foundation — which supports youth sports organizations, first responders, the military, and families in need in their community — with her husband, former NFL player Michael Schofield.

  Steph Chambers / Getty Images
Steph Chambers / Getty Images

29. Curler Aileen Geving works in insurance.

  The Washington Post / The Washington Post via Getty Images
The Washington Post / The Washington Post via Getty Images

30. Alpine skier Lindsey Vonn runs a production company called Après Productions. She's also the author of two books — Strong Is the New Beautiful and Rise: My Story — and the founder of the Lindsey Vonn Foundation.

  Mattia Ozbot / Getty Images
Mattia Ozbot / Getty Images

31. Snowboarder Chloe Kim has worked in the fashion industry. She's made multiple collections with Roxy, her outerwear sponsor, and she partnered with Vogue and eBay to model vintage looks for the "Eternal Eras of Fashion" campaign.

She told Vogue,
Sean M. Haffey / Getty Images

She told Vogue, "There's a big connection between fashion and sport because sport is another form of art where we really express ourselves. For me, snowboarding is my escape, and I think the same with fashion. Just being able to be myself unapologetically…I think, is the most empowering thing to feel. Fashion and sports both allow me to do that."

32. Curler Cory Thiesse is a lab technician.

  Stacy Revere / Getty Images
Stacy Revere / Getty Images

33. Snowboarder Jake Vedder created an autobiographical comic book series.

  Tim Clayton / Corbis via Getty Images
Tim Clayton / Corbis via Getty Images

34. Curler Luc Violette is a civil design engineer. He likes the angles and "weird physics" of curling.

  Chung Sung-Jun / Getty Images
Chung Sung-Jun / Getty Images

35. Luger Summer Britcher has worked in sports broadcasting as an expert commentator.

  Julian Finney / Getty Images
Julian Finney / Getty Images

36. Freestyle skier Derek Krueger is the co-owner of a Utah fly fishing guide service called Utah Troutfitters. He's an avid fly fisher.

  Al Bello / Getty Images
Al Bello / Getty Images

37. Ski Mountaineer Cam Smith works as an instructor at the Adaptive Sports Center of Crested Butte.

  Valerio Pennicino / Getty Images
Valerio Pennicino / Getty Images

Many athletes join the military and the World Class Athlete Program, which gives any military member the opportunity to compete in Olympic sports. It has training centers across the US. More than 450 soldier-athletes have competed at the highest level of their sports.

38. Pairs figure skater Spencer Akira Howe joined the Army in 2024. He's also a hockey and figure skating coach at The Skating Club of Boston.

  Toru Hanai - International Skati / International Skating Union via Getty Images
Toru Hanai - International Skati / International Skating Union via Getty Images

39. In 2018, biathlete Sean Doherty signed up for the Army. With the Vermont Army National Guard, he's a carpentry and masonry specialist.

  Michael Steele / Getty Images
Michael Steele / Getty Images

40. Bobsledder Frank Del Duca is an Army sergeant who's stationed in Lake Placid, New York.

  Maddie Meyer / Getty Images
Maddie Meyer / Getty Images

41. Biathlete Maxime Germain is an aviation specialist in the Vermont Army National Guard.

  Michael Steele / Getty Images
Michael Steele / Getty Images

42. Nordic combined skier Ben Loomis enlisted in the Army in 2019. He's a sergeant.

  CHRISTOF STACHE / AFP via Getty Images
CHRISTOF STACHE / AFP via Getty Images

43. Bobsledder Jasmine Jones is a Senior Airman in the Air Force.

Picture Alliance / dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images, Maddie Meyer / Getty Images

44. Biathlete Deedra Irwin has been in the Vermont Army National Guard since 2019.

  Michael Steele / Getty Images
Michael Steele / Getty Images

45. Skeleton athlete Kelly Curtis is in the Air Force.

  Al Bello / Getty Images
Al Bello / Getty Images

46. Luger Emily Fischnaller is an Army veteran who served for more than a decade. She also co-founded Champions 4 Changes, a nonprofit that runs Olympian and Paralympian-led fitness classes for people of all abilities.

  Picture Alliance / dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images
Picture Alliance / dpa/picture alliance via Getty Images

Many Olympic athletes start nonprofits to support causes that are important to them.

47. Freestyle skier Winter Vinecki is the founder of Team Winter, which raises awareness and money for prostate research in honor of her late dad.

  Lintao Zhang / Getty Images
Lintao Zhang / Getty Images

48. Snowboarder Red Gerard is the founder of the Red's Backyard Foundation, which aims to make board sports more accessible for kids.

  Michael Reaves / Getty Images
Michael Reaves / Getty Images

49. Luger Zachary DiGregorio is the co-founder of Champions 4 Changes, a nonprofit that runs Olympian and Paralympian-led fitness classes for people of all abilities.

  Julian Finney / Getty Images
Julian Finney / Getty Images

50. Snowboarder Jake Pates is the founder of the Happy Healthy Brain Foundation, which raises awareness about concussion protocols and the importance of baseline brain scanning for athletes.

He was inspired to start the organization after getting a concussion at a snowboarding event in 2019.He told KOAA News5,
Sean M. Haffey / Getty Images

He was inspired to start the organization after getting a concussion at a snowboarding event in 2019.

He told KOAA News5, "I basically lied to them and told them I was fine so I could get back out and not miss training and not miss the event. So when I did go back out, I was just all over the place with symptoms. Headache, dizziness, nausea, all the above. At the time, I never understood the impact that serious brain injuries could become."

51. Cross-country skier Samantha Smith is the co-founder of GO BIG Inc., which offers sports equipment, mentorship, and educational resources to kids in Boise.

  Grega Valancic/VOIGT / Getty Images
Grega Valancic/VOIGT / Getty Images

52. And finally, singles figure skater Maxim Naumov is the on-ice director for the youth program his late parents founded, Tomorrow's Champions, at the Skating Club of Boston.

  Matthew Stockman / Getty Images
Matthew Stockman / Getty Images

Category: General Sports