What is “huge amounts of math?”
What is “a good amount of money”?
What is “a pretty high chance”?
Majors do not lead to money - careers/jobs are what lead to money. You can major in psychology and become a social worker making $42,000 a year or become a surgeon making $420,000 a year. Majors can influence the kinds of jobs that are available to you, but they don’t solely determine that - your skills, internships, and other experiences probably have a greater influence on that, in addition to any graduate work that you do. For example, I was a psychology major in undergrad, but I have a graduate degree, have skill and experience in statistics and tech, and make well above the median for psychology majors with grad degrees.
Other thoughts:
-Math is unavoidable, quite frankly. The majority of high-paying careers involve some level of mathematical manipulation. The only one I can think of that doesn’t is physician. Maybe some corporate lawyers, I suppose, who reach the tippy-top. But even most high-powered business executives deal with budget and such, although that math isn’t complex. Which is why I say you should define what you mean. Do you mean no advanced/complex math (which means finance, actuary/risk management, statistician, informatics, epidemiology are out?) Or do you mean not a lot of math period (which would rule out accounting, software development, market research, business management, and most other jobs that pay a decent wage)? Like I said, I was a psych major but math is a pretty significant part of my job.
-Job chances are partially determined by major. Of course, computer science majors on average have better job prospects than English majors. But they are also partially determined by your skills. An English major with web design skills, excellent writing samples, and two excellent and relevant internships probably has better prospects than a computer science major who doesn’t code well and hasn’t done any internships.
-Quality is just as important as, or more important, than quantity. There may be “more” total jobs for engineers out there, but that doesn’t matter if you hate calculus, or don’t like working with your hands, or if all the jobs for engineers are in places you don’t want to live. Conversely, there may be fewer jobs in marketing (and/or they are more competitive because of all the people who qualify for those jobs), but maybe you totally rock at marketing and they’re all jobs you could see yourself in and enjoy.
So I say think about the kinds of skills you want to build and what tasks you will do every day in a job. Or think about the specific things that are important to you. Do some research on careers that make the amount of money you are comfortable with and then go for those. I mean, if you want to make private jet, summers in St. Barth’s, winter home on the French Riviera type money then there’s a small subset of jobs you need to look to (most of them are math-oriented, and in the financial or tech industry). But if by “good amount” you mean you want to support your family on an upper-middle-class income (a nice house, good suburb with good schools, nice clothes, nice cars, vacation or two every year, etc. whatever) then there are lots of jobs/careers that can lead to that.