With the release of World of Warcraft Classic: Wrath of the Lich King professions receive another critical update making them one of the most important tools in your characters kit. Every profession has its uses and has ways to make gold. Here we’ll be doing a quick overview of all the professions and highlighting the changes that Wrath of the Lich King will bring.

All Professions

There are two different kinds of professions in World of Warcraft, Primary and Secondary professions. Players can learn two primary professions per character as well as all three Secondary Professions on every character.

The Primary Professions are:

Alchemy Blacksmithing Enchanting Engineering Herbalism Inscription Jewelcrafting Leatherworking Mining Tailoring Skinning

The Secondary Professions are:

Fishing Cooking First Aid

All professions are further classified separately: Gathering or Crafting. Gathering professions allow you to acquire materials from out in the World. While Crafting professions allow you to further refine those materials to make a wide variety of different items such as armor, weapons, accessories, consumables, etc.

Leveling Guides

Best Professions For Every Class

All professions provide a bonus to stats in some way, but some are more powerful than others. Here are the top three professions that all classes can benefit from.

#1: Engineering

​​​By and large, almost all classes can benefit from the many useful tools and buffs that Engineering provides. Not only are there a number of useful tools, but there are plenty of items and enchants that increase a player’s effectiveness in both PvE and PvP environments.

Tools:

Jeeves: On-Use Repair Vendor MOLL-E: On-Use Mailbox

Equipment:

Best in Slot Head Piece such as Charged Titanium Specs, Weakness Spectralizers, and Visage Liquification Goggles

Enchants:

Boots: Nitro Boosts Gloves: Hyperspeed Accelerators Back: Springy Arachnoweave or Flexweave Underlay Bracers: Frag Belt Can be used in addition to Eternal Belt Buckle. ​​​​​​​Head: Mind Amplification Dish Waist: Personal Electromagnetic Pulse Generator Ranged: Heartseeker Scope

Explosives:

Global Thermal Sapper Charge and Saronite Bomb

#2: Jewelcrafting

Jewelcrafting is a good second profession for the sole reason that any class benefits from the items crafted with it. It is a good source of equipment, such as Necklaces, Rings, and Trinkets and the 3 Jeweler’s Gems provide the same stat bonuses as other professions. It Is also a great source of gold from the Daily Jewelcrafting Quest, Prospecting, selling, or cutting Gems.

#3: Tailoring

Tailoring is a great second profession for Cloth wearers in particular. It provides the best back enchant for many classes, and they are exclusive to Tailors:

Lightweave Embroidery Swordguard Embroidery Darkglow Embroidery

It also is a great option simply to gather Frostweave Cloth with the A Guide to Northern Cloth Scavenging to sell or for use in bandages, bags, and other equipment.

Proficiency Brackets and Level Cap

Whether players are returning to Wrath of the Lich King as their first interaction of Classic or if they’re continuing their journey through Azeroth they’ll find that professions will be more important than ever.

The level cap for professions is increased from 375 to 450. The items that players can craft get stronger as they level up. Around level 400 is when players will begin to see very powerful recipes. These can be used for to their own characters, but they can also generally be sold to other players for a profit. We go over this in greater detail in the profession-specific guides.

Whether you’re looking to swap professions or level one from scratch on a new character, some professions require more time and gold invested into them. Here are the leveling brackets and new level cap for Wotlk:

Classic: Azeroth (1 - 300)

Provides items for Characters Level 1 - 60 and has several level brackets:

Apprentice (1 - 75): Requires Level 5 Journeyman (50 - 150): Requires level 10 Expert (125 - 225): Requires Level 20 Artisan (200 - 300): Requires Level 35

The Burning Crusade: Outland (275 - 375)

Provides items for Characters Level 58 - 70 and has one level bracket:

Master (275 - 375): Requires Level 45

Wrath of the Lich King: Northrend (350 - 450)

Provides items for Characters Level 68 - 80 and also has one level bracket:

Grand Master (350 - 450): Requires Level 55

The level brackets overlap so that you can start crafting certain materials that are required for the next bracket as they are often components used in the next bracket.

Common Profession Pairings

As players are limited to only two Primary Professions per character, players will often pair one profession with another one that complements it. Many Crafting Professions require materials that are generally obtained from a specific Gathering Profession. The table below indicates the professions, their type (Crafting or Gathering), and which ones are complementary to each other.

Skill-Up Leveling Success Percentages

The chance of success to gain a skill level in a profession, aka “skill-up” is dependent on the recipe you are crafting and your current level.

The exact percent chance of a skill-up for any given recipe is as follows:

(Grey Level - Your Current Skill Level) / (Grey Level - Yellow Level)

So for example, a recipe has the following skill-up thresholds: 1 25 37 50. If you were trying to determine the chance of success at level 39 the calculation would be as follows:

(50-39)/(50-25) = 44%

Also, remember that each attempt is independent of the previous attempt. Therefore, it is impossible to calculate exactly how many crafting attempts and materials you will need to skill up. The exception is if you were to only ever craft when a recipe is still Orange. However, if a recipe just became yellow and the next recipe requires more materials, it may be wise to craft the previous recipe a few more times as the skill-up success rate is likely very high.

For this reason, you will see the “approximately” symbol (~) used in recipes where there is a chance of failure to skill up and therefore hard to determine exact quantities.

Changing Professions

It’s generally ill-advised to switch professions, as it requires completely unlearning the profession as well as any recipes you may have learned. If you do decide to relearn it again you will have to start from level 1 all over again. However, players will often initially level complementary professions together, but upon reaching max level keep only one crafting profession to refine materials into goods for sale. The second profession is then switched out to a different crafting profession for various items for personal use or as another method of gold making. This can often be very expensive as you will now have to solely rely on buying materials from other players or the Auction House in order to craft. The other option is to also have a second character become a Gathering-only character (usually a Druid; for better movement speed), having two Gathering professions, providing the necessary resources for the other characters’ Crafting professions.

Another reason for relearning a profession is in the case of specializations, such as Goblin and Gnomish Engineering. Many of the items from the recipes of one can still be used even if you no longer have that specialization. This leads some players to first craft everything they can with one specialization and then switch to the other as soon as they have crafted those items.

Additional Skill Level Sources

There are three different ways a player can increase their profession skill level above their base skill level attained via crafting or gathering. Racial Traits, Enchants, and Equipment. These bonuses will allow learning recipes sooner and cause the skill-up bracket to be extended. For example, for a Gnome with Engineering crafting a recipe that becomes yellow at 125, it would stay orange until 140.

Racial Traits

Some races have a passive racial trait that increases their proficiency in a specific professions, the races that have bonuses are as follows:

Gnome: Engineering Specialization, +15 Engineering Tauren: Cultivation, +15 Herbalism Draenei: Gemcutting, +5 Jewelcrafting Blood Elf: Arcane Affinity, +10 Enchanting

Enchants That Provide Profession Bonus

Enchants are applied to gloves and only take into effect when worn. the provide either +2 or +5 to the respective skill.

There is also another unique enchant that provides +5 to all gathering skills, Herbalism, Mining, and Skinning. This is useful for players that have 2 gathering professions to save them an inventory slot!

Enchant Gloves - Gatherer

Equipment That Provides Profession Skill Bonus