Pros and Cons to Multiple Majors/Minors

@collegemom3717 has a lot of good advice. A lot of jobs in business involve writing and working with social media so that would cover 3 or your 4 current interests. Most likely though, your interests will change.

Note that not all colleges offer courses in business and if they do it may be in a separate school, with limited opportunities to take classes in the arts and sciences school. A liberal arts college is a good choice for someone with greatly varied interests, but they don’t generally offer courses in business/finance.

My older son was able to triple major at Cornell and graduate in 4 years, but all 3 majors were in the College of Arts and Sciences and at least vaguely related (French, history, government). He only took one course outside CAS, the famous wine course in the Hotel school.

My daughter graduated from WashU in 4 years with 2 majors and a minor (history, secondary education, environmental studies), but again all 3 were in Arts and Sciences. Because of the student teaching requirements of senior year, she had to complete her history major by the end of junior year, and she wasn’t able to study abroad at all. These days being a high school teacher pretty much requires a double major, so colleges make that possible for their students on that track.

For both my kids, the multiple-majors path was only possible because they had lots of APs which allowed them to place out of a number of requirements.

A lot of colleges let you explore freshman year and don’t require you to declare a major until sophomore spring. Take a variety of courses and see what intrigues you 2 or 3 years from now.