Career counseling with the intellectually gifted poses unique challenges to counselors. Development of competent practices with this population requires the career counselor to be aware of several issues specific to the intellectually gifted in general, along with specific issues that may differentially affect gifted males, females, and minorities. Traditional career counseling is insufficient to meet the needs of this population. Therefore, the article reviews trends and improvements to counseling the intellectually gifted, controversies, and multicultural issues and suggests an expanded role for career counselors of the intellectually gifted.Research on the career development needs of intellectually gifted students has often been linked to the rise and fall of the political fortunes of the gifted education movement. In addition, changing theories about the nature of giftedness have further complicated the process of making generalizations about bright students. The post-Sputnik era emphasized research on the needs of high-IQ young people, the late 1960s and early 1970s de-emphasized intelligence scores and focused on creativity, and the 1980s and 1990s produced a plethora of theories regarding intellectual development and a further exploration within the realm of specific talents.With the new millennium came an increasing concern for integrating multicultural knowledge into interventions for gifted students. Therefore, progress has continued, if somewhat inconsistently, in the conceptualization of vocational development of intellectually gifted students, the understanding of gifted students' choices and needs, and the creation of research-based career counseling interventions. This article reviews advances in the vocational psychology of intellectually gifted students, the implications for career assessment, and the means by which counselors can help these students to plan more effectively for their professional futures.