The national median teacher salary is $61,350 in 2026, according to BLS data. But the state you teach in matters enormously — a teacher in New York earns twice as much as one in Mississippi. Experience, degree level, and subject area also add or subtract thousands per year. Below is the complete 50-state breakdown plus every variable that moves the number.

Teacher Salary by State 2026 — All 50 States

The table below shows average teacher salary, typical starting salary, and a cost-of-living-adjusted figure. The CoL-adjusted column is the most useful for comparing purchasing power across states.

Rank State Avg Salary Starting Salary CoL-Adjusted
1 New York $92,000 $57,000 $74,800
2 California $87,000 $52,000 $62,600
3 Massachusetts $85,000 $50,000 $72,000
4 Connecticut $82,000 $48,000 $73,900
5 New Jersey $80,000 $52,000 $71,400
6 Maryland $75,000 $48,000 $65,200
7 Washington $74,000 $46,000 $67,300
8 Illinois $72,000 $42,000 $74,200
9 Pennsylvania $71,000 $44,000 $75,500
10 Oregon $70,000 $42,000 $61,900
11 Rhode Island $69,000 $42,000 $61,500
12 Alaska $68,500 $45,000 $57,500
13 Michigan $68,000 $40,000 $71,600
14 Minnesota $67,500 $41,000 $67,500
15 Nevada $66,500 $41,000 $62,700
16 Hawaii $66,000 $43,000 $53,200
17 Virginia $65,500 $42,000 $63,600
18 Delaware $65,000 $42,000 $64,500
19 Colorado $64,500 $41,000 $57,800
20 Ohio $64,000 $38,000 $68,800
21 Georgia $63,500 $40,000 $64,200
22 Wisconsin $63,000 $38,000 $65,400
23 Wyoming $62,500 $39,000 $69,200
24 Iowa $62,000 $37,000 $68,100
25 Vermont $61,500 $38,000 $59,100
26 Indiana $61,000 $37,000 $66,300
27 Kentucky $60,500 $37,000 $68,200
28 Texas $60,000 $40,000 $60,700
29 Nebraska $59,500 $36,000 $64,600
30 Tennessee $59,000 $37,000 $63,000
31 Montana $58,500 $36,000 $63,300
32 North Dakota $58,000 $36,000 $62,700
33 Utah $57,500 $37,000 $56,100
34 Idaho $57,000 $35,000 $59,800
35 Missouri $56,500 $35,000 $62,800
36 South Carolina $55,000 $35,000 $58,500
37 Alabama $54,000 $35,000 $59,400
38 New Hampshire $53,500 $35,000 $49,500
39 Maine $53,000 $34,000 $54,600
40 Kansas $52,500 $35,000 $57,300
41 Louisiana $52,000 $41,000 $55,300
42 North Carolina $52,000 $38,000 $55,900
43 Arizona $51,500 $38,500 $50,500
44 South Dakota $50,000 $36,000 $54,300
45 Florida $49,500 $40,000 $49,500
46 New Mexico $48,500 $36,000 $52,200
47 Oklahoma $47,500 $34,000 $52,500
48 West Virginia $47,000 $33,000 $55,300
49 Arkansas $46,500 $33,000 $52,500
50 Mississippi $46,000 $32,000 $52,000
National $61,350 $42,000

Source: BLS Occupational Employment Statistics and NEA Rankings data, 2025–2026 estimates. CoL-adjusted figures use MIT Living Wage regional indices. Figures reflect all K-12 public school teachers.


Teacher Salary by Grade Level

High school teachers earn more than elementary teachers on average, primarily because secondary credentials often require deeper subject expertise and districts compete more aggressively for STEM teachers.

Level National Average Starting Salary Top Salary (20+ years)
Preschool $38,000 $28,000 $52,000
Elementary (K-5) $61,000 $42,000 $82,000
Middle School (6-8) $62,500 $43,000 $84,000
High School (9-12) $63,500 $44,000 $86,000
Special Education $64,500 $44,500 $88,000

Teacher Salary by Subject (High School)

Subject-area shortages directly drive compensation. Math and science teachers are in chronic undersupply, which gives them more leverage in negotiations and makes them targets for district-funded incentive programs.

Subject Average Salary Demand Level
STEM (Math/Science) $67,000 Very High
Special Education $65,000 Very High
Career/Technical Education $64,000 High
Foreign Language $63,000 Moderate
English/Language Arts $62,000 Moderate
Social Studies $61,500 Moderate
Physical Education $60,500 Moderate
Art/Music $59,000 Lower

Teacher Salary by Experience

Most public school districts use a “step-and-lane” salary schedule: automatic annual raises (steps) for years of service, and column (lane) jumps for additional education. This makes salary advancement predictable but limits negotiation leverage for individual teachers.

Years of Experience Average Salary % Increase from Start
0–3 years $44,000 Baseline
4–9 years $52,000 +18%
10–14 years $61,000 +39%
15–19 years $67,000 +52%
20–24 years $72,000 +64%
25+ years $76,000 +73%

Teacher Salary by Degree Level

Earning a master’s degree is the most reliable salary lever available to most teachers. Many districts offer a $5,000–$10,000 permanent column jump the moment you complete a qualifying degree.

Education Level Average Salary Premium
Bachelor’s degree $57,000 Baseline
Master’s degree $65,000 +14%
Master’s + 30 credits $70,000 +23%
Doctorate (Ed.D/Ph.D) $75,000 +32%
National Board Certified +$5,000–$10,000 Varies by state

Teacher Salary vs. Cost of Living

A nominal salary comparison overstates the gap between high-paying and low-paying states. On a cost-of-living-adjusted basis, Pennsylvania and Illinois teachers have more purchasing power than California teachers despite earning $16,000–$21,000 less per year.

State Avg Salary CoL Index Adjusted Salary
Pennsylvania $71,000 94 $75,500
Illinois $72,000 97 $74,200
New York $92,000 123 $74,800
Michigan $68,000 95 $71,600
Ohio $64,000 93 $68,800

Teacher Unions and Salary

Union membership significantly affects teacher pay and job security. States with strong collective bargaining rights tend to have higher average salaries, better step schedules, and more robust benefits.

Factor Union State Non-Union / RTW State
Avg teacher salary ~$65,000 ~$55,000
Salary schedule transparency Required Optional
Strike rights Generally yes Restricted
Benefits quality Stronger Variable

The NEA and AFT are the two major national teacher unions. About 53% of K-12 public school teachers are members of a union.


Teacher Benefits Beyond Salary

Total compensation for teachers often runs 20–30% above the stated salary when benefits are included. The defined-benefit pension is particularly valuable — it guarantees a monthly income in retirement regardless of market performance.

Benefit Estimated Value Notes
Defined-benefit pension $15,000–$30,000/yr In retirement, varies by state
Health insurance $8,000–$15,000/yr Often heavily subsidized
Student loan forgiveness (PSLF) Up to full balance After 10 years at public school
Teacher Loan Forgiveness Up to $17,500 After 5 years at low-income school
Summer and holiday time ~13 weeks/yr Unpaid summer, paid breaks
Job security (tenure) High After 2–4 years in most states

Teacher Pension vs. 403(b): Which Builds More Wealth?

Most public school teachers have access to both a defined benefit pension AND a 403(b) plan (the public sector equivalent of a 401(k)). Understanding how they work together is critical for retirement planning.

Defined Benefit Pension (Most Public Schools)

Feature Typical Public Teacher Pension
Contribution 7-12% of salary (you) + employer match
Vesting 5-10 years service
Benefit formula 2-2.5% × years × final salary
30-year teacher at $70k salary $42,000-$52,500/year guaranteed for life
Social Security 15 states exclude teachers from SS
Portability Very limited; leave early = low payout

403(b) Plan for Teachers

Feature Teacher 403(b)
2026 contribution limit $23,500 (under 50); $31,000 (50+)
Employer match Varies by district (often none)
Investment options Mutual funds, annuities
Portability Fully portable
Best use Supplement pension; bridge to age 55

Which States Exclude Teachers From Social Security?

15 states (including California, Ohio, Texas, Massachusetts, and Illinois) have their own pension systems instead of Social Security. In these states:

  • You don’t pay Social Security taxes — but you don’t earn credits
  • A substantial pension replaces what Social Security would have paid
  • The Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) reduces Social Security if you also worked other jobs
  • The Government Pension Offset (GPO) reduces spousal Social Security benefits

15 States Excluding Teachers From Social Security

Alaska, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Missouri, Nevada, Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas — if you teach in these states, you won’t earn Social Security credits for that work. Your pension must serve as your primary retirement income source, making the pension system’s health and your vesting status critically important to your financial plan.

For teachers in these 15 states, the pension is both more generous AND your sole retirement security — making vesting timeline and benefit formula critical factors in choosing where to teach.

How to Increase Teacher Salary

Strategy Potential Annual Increase
Earn a master’s degree +$5,000–$15,000
National Board Certification +$5,000–$10,000
Relocate to a higher-paying state +$10,000–$40,000
Move to a higher-paying district +$5,000–$20,000
Teach in-demand subjects (STEM, SpEd) +$2,000–$8,000
Coaching/extracurricular stipends +$2,000–$10,000
Summer school teaching +$3,000–$8,000
Curriculum or instructional design +$1,000–$5,000
Administrative certification (principal) Path to $80K–$150K+

Teacher Shortage Areas

High-demand positions frequently come with signing bonuses, loan forgiveness top-ups, or district-funded tuition assistance for those willing to fill the gap.

  • Special Education — nationwide shortage in virtually every state
  • Mathematics — persistent shortage, especially secondary algebra and statistics
  • Science — physics and chemistry most acute
  • Bilingual/ESL — growing demand in high-immigration areas
  • Rural districts — many offer housing stipends and relocation bonuses

The $250 Teacher Classroom Supply Deduction

Teachers who buy classroom supplies out-of-pocket can deduct up to $300 per educator ($600 for married educators who both teach) directly from income — not just as an itemized deduction. This above-the-line deduction is available even if you take the standard deduction. Eligible expenses include books, supplies, computer equipment, and COVID-19 protective items.

Teaching Salary Reality Check

Hidden Cost Annual Estimate Notes
Out-of-pocket classroom supplies $500–$1,000 $250 is federally deductible
Unpaid work hours 10–20 hrs/week Planning, grading, parent comms
Required graduate coursework $10,000–$30,000 total Spread over 5–8 years
Professional development $0–$500 Sometimes district-covered

Related: Average Teacher Salary | Income Percentile Calculator | Side Income Ideas for Teachers

Sources

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