For conversion formulas, overtime scenarios, and annual-pay planning, see the Hourly to Annual hub.

For role-by-role compensation benchmarking and career income strategy, see the Profession Salary Guides hub.

Electricians are among the best-paid skilled tradespeople in the US, with growing demand from EV infrastructure, renewable energy, and construction. Here is a complete look at electrician compensation in 2026.

Electrician Salary Overview

By License / Experience Level

Level Hourly Annual
Apprentice (Year 1–2) $18–$24 $37,000–$50,000
Apprentice (Year 3–5) $24–$32 $50,000–$66,000
Journeyman Electrician $28–$40 $58,000–$83,000
Master Electrician $38–$58 $79,000–$120,000
Electrical Contractor / Owner $60–$120+ $125,000–$250,000+

Apprenticeship programs typically run 4–5 years through IBEW or NECA. You earn wages throughout — no tuition debt.

Median Annual Salary (BLS 2025 Data)

  • Electricians overall: $64,700
  • Top 10%: $101,000+
  • Bottom 10%: $39,000

Electrician Salary by State

State Average Annual Salary
Illinois $92,000
New York $88,000
Hawaii $86,000
Alaska $83,000
Washington $79,000
Oregon $76,000
California $75,000
Massachusetts $74,000
New Jersey $72,000
Colorado $70,000
Texas $63,000
Florida $57,000
Georgia $56,000
Tennessee $54,000
Mississippi $48,000

States with high union density (IL, NY, HI, AK) consistently pay more. Right-to-work states generally pay less but have lower cost of living.


Electrician Salary by Specialty

Specialty Annual Salary Range
Residential Electrician $48,000–$72,000
Commercial Electrician $58,000–$88,000
Industrial Electrician $65,000–$95,000
Solar / PV Installer $55,000–$80,000
EV Charging Installer $58,000–$85,000
Instrumentation & Controls $75,000–$110,000
High-Voltage Lineman $80,000–$130,000

Industrial and controls specialties command the highest pay. Solar and EV installation are fast-growing segments with strong wage trajectory.


Union vs. Non-Union Electricians

Factor Union (IBEW) Non-Union
Hourly base wage (journeyman) $35–$60 $26–$40
Benefits (health, pension) $15–$25/hr equivalent Varies / often none
Total compensation $50–$85/hr $26–$45/hr
Overtime rules Strictly enforced Varies by employer
Apprenticeship Formal 5-year program On-the-job, informal

Union electricians earn significantly more in total compensation, especially in high-cost metro areas. Non-union work offers more flexibility but typically fewer benefits.


Electrician Career Path

Apprentice (Year 1–5)
    ↓
Journeyman Electrician (license required)
    ↓
Master Electrician (additional exam + experience)
    ↓
Electrical Contractor / Business Owner

Licensing requirements vary by state. Most states require:

  • Journeyman: 4–5 years apprenticeship + written exam
  • Master: 2+ years as journeyman + exam
  • Contractor: Master license + business licensing

How to Increase Your Earnings as an Electrician

Strategy Estimated Income Boost
Get journeyman license +$15,000–$25,000/yr vs. unlicensed
Get master electrician license +$20,000–$40,000/yr
Join a union +$10,000–$30,000/yr in total comp
Specialize in industrial / controls +$15,000–$30,000/yr
Work overtime consistently +$10,000–$25,000/yr
Start your own electrical business 2x–5x journeyman wages (with risk)
Move to a high-paying state +$5,000–$30,000/yr

Job Outlook for Electricians

The BLS projects 11% job growth for electricians through 2032 — much faster than average. Key demand drivers:

  • EV infrastructure: Charging station installation nationwide
  • Solar & battery storage: Residential and commercial installs
  • Data centers: Massive electrical infrastructure buildouts
  • Construction boom: Housing and commercial development
  • Grid modernization: Aging electrical infrastructure replacement

Electrician is one of the few careers with strong job security, above-average wages, no college debt, and growing demand simultaneously.


Electrician Income: Sample Monthly Budgets

Journeyman Electrician — $68,000/yr (Texas, married filing jointly)

Category Monthly
Take-home pay (est.) $4,600
Housing (mortgage/rent) $1,400
Transportation $600
Food & groceries $700
Utilities $200
401(k) contribution $300
Other expenses $400
Remaining $1,000

Master Electrician — $105,000/yr (Illinois, single)

Category Monthly
Take-home pay (est.) $6,200
Housing $1,800
Transportation $700
Food & groceries $600
Utilities $200
401(k) max contribution $1,950
Other expenses $500
Remaining $450

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to become a journeyman electrician? Typically 4–5 years through a formal apprenticeship. You work full-time and earn wages while completing classroom instruction. Most apprentices are 18–25 when they start.

Can electricians make six figures? Yes. Master electricians, industrial specialists, and contractor/business owners commonly earn $100,000–$150,000+. Union journeymen in Illinois and New York can approach six figures with overtime.

Is the electrician trade hard on your body? Less physically demanding than roofing or concrete work, but it involves kneeling, crawling, working in tight spaces, and lifting. Industrial electrical work can be strenuous. The trade has a longer career ceiling than many physically intensive jobs.

What’s the difference between a residential and commercial electrician? Residential electricians work on homes and small buildings (120/240V systems). Commercial electricians deal with larger three-phase systems, higher voltages, and more complex code compliance. Commercial pays more and requires additional knowledge.

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

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