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Carpenter Salary by State (2026)

Median annual pay for carpenters in all 51 reporting states, from U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS, May 2025) data. Roughly 670,080 carpenters are employed nationwide โ€” the highest median pay is $85,280 in Hawaii, and the typical state median is about $59,370.

Top-Paying States

#1
Hawaii
$85,280
median / year
#2
Illinois
$79,000
median / year
#3
California
$75,920
median / year
#4
Massachusetts
$75,200
median / year
#5
Washington
$74,190
median / year

Full Table: All States

#StateMedian Annual WageEmployment
1Hawaii$85,2804,810
2Illinois$79,00019,570
3California$75,920100,750
4Massachusetts$75,20018,540
5Washington$74,19026,960
6Alaska$73,8602,560
7New York$72,33040,630
8Minnesota$64,93014,930
9Connecticut$64,0605,160
10New Jersey$64,01014,230
11Maryland$62,9609,770
12Indiana$62,87015,240
13Oregon$62,87015,110
14Colorado$62,83012,740
15Vermont$62,4003,080
16Nevada$62,38012,700
17Maine$62,1605,170
18District of Columbia$61,7101,540
19Michigan$61,68018,590
20Wisconsin$61,66013,880
21New Hampshire$61,2003,760
22Missouri$60,84014,410
23Rhode Island$60,8402,580
24Ohio$60,81018,450
25New Mexico$59,7203,630
26Pennsylvania$59,37030,630
27Delaware$59,2002,250
28Montana$58,8204,030
29Arizona$58,58016,230
30North Dakota$57,8902,360
31Iowa$57,7105,770
32Kansas$56,9605,210
33Wyoming$56,8502,260
34Virginia$55,69020,460
35Kentucky$52,6808,540
36Utah$52,36015,220
37Idaho$52,0008,380
38Tennessee$50,8308,200
39South Carolina$50,6706,950
40Nebraska$50,3205,710
41Louisiana$49,9208,990
42Florida$49,87039,300
43Georgia$49,3509,190
44North Carolina$49,10013,480
45Texas$48,90033,540
46West Virginia$48,7103,670
47Mississippi$48,6502,950
48Alabama$48,2205,560
49South Dakota$48,1404,560
50Arkansas$47,7604,030
51Oklahoma$46,9103,820

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS), May 2025 state estimates. "โ€”" means BLS did not publish an estimate for that state. Wages are medians โ€” half of workers earn more. Click a column header to sort.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do carpenters earn more in some states than others?

State pay differences come down to union density, cost of living, licensing requirements, and local industry mix. States with strong union representation and major industrial or construction activity tend to pay carpenters more โ€” but higher-paying states often have higher living costs, so compare take-home value, not just the number.

Is this what a beginner carpenter makes?

No โ€” these are median wages across all experience levels, so half of carpenters earn more and half earn less. Apprentices and entry-level workers typically start around 40โ€“60% of the experienced rate, with scheduled raises as they complete training. Within a few years, most reach or pass the figures in this table.

Do carpenters need a college degree?

No. Most carpenters train through paid apprenticeships or short certificate programs and earn while they learn โ€” no four-year degree or student debt required. See our guide on how to become an apprentice.

Next Steps

Pay is only half the picture โ€” training path, licensing, and demand matter just as much. Start here:

Full Carpenter Career Guide โ†’ Compare All 25 Trades โ†’ How to Become an Apprentice