The trade off is that these jobs often come with immense stress and a lack of work life balance.
I took the FANG route and even bounced around big tech companies to get bigger pay increases. Financially it worked out extremely well, but emotionally I had to figure out how to deal with constant stress, anxiety, and at some level my job became a significant part of my identity.
To make fundamentally more money, go work at FAANG. To make more than that, become a high paid consultant.
Other forms of engineering - civil, etc. but that will require a degree. Economics - same deal. Lawyering. But that will require a JD and working your way up the ladder.
Nursing is probably not something you’d consider comfortable but can be very lucrative, especially travel nursing or becoming an NP. But will require you to lift a finger.
If you have the capital - become a landlord.
but on a serious note - own a business.
the thing is for software the bar for entry is fairly low while the pay is sufficiently good considering you don't own the business. like you could make millions off a pizzeria chain but you gotta start from square one. you could start your own law firm but you gotta go to law school usually followed by years in the field. or you could start your own e-commerce store selling rubber duckies. sky's the limit when it comes to owning a business.
p.s. look at skyline robotics, they seemed to crack the window cleaning business.