Career indecision is a complex phenomenon and an increasing number of authors have proposed that undecided individuals do not form a group with homogeneous characteristics. This study examines career decision statuses among a sample of 362 12th-grade Portuguese students. A cluster-analytical procedure, based on a battery of instruments designed to assess career and personality dimensions, was employed to understand the heterogeneous groupings that underlie the concept of career indecision. Three groups of career decision statuses were identified and their characteristics described. Finally, implications for career counseling interventions are discussed.Keywords career decision statuses, career indecision, taxonomy of career problems, cluster analysis, adolescence According to Kelly and Lee (2002), career indecision is, next to interests, the single most important construct in the field of vocational psychology and a classic topic of research (Borgen, 1991). Crites (1969), for instance, identified several studies on career indecision published in the 1930s. The vast number of studies on career indecision could be explained by the high prevalence of undecided students in secondary schools and colleges, who seek career counseling in order to formulate career plans (Corkin, Arbona, Coleman, & Ramirez, 2008;Forner, 2007).Initially, research on career indecision attempted to identify variables that could distinguish between decided and undecided individuals. The main goal was to understand the causes that lead to difficulties in career decision making and design appropriate interventions in order to assist undecided individuals. This differential approach to career indecision produced results that were, in general, ambiguous and inconclusive (for a review, see Forner, 2007;Santos, 2007;Slaney, 1988). For example, in some studies, academic achievement favored career-decided individuals (Lunneborg, 1976), whereas in others this relationship was precisely the opposite (Lewallen, 1995).