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Electrician Salary by State (2026)

Median annual pay for electricians in all 51 reporting states, from U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (OEWS, May 2025) data. Roughly 757,240 electricians are employed nationwide โ€” the highest median pay is $101,310 in Oregon, and the typical state median is about $64,810.

Top-Paying States

#1
Oregon
$101,310
median / year
#2
Illinois
$99,560
median / year
#3
Hawaii
$96,460
median / year
#4
Washington
$95,220
median / year
#5
Alaska
$89,440
median / year

Full Table: All States

#StateMedian Annual WageEmployment
1Oregon$101,31010,590
2Illinois$99,56023,120
3Hawaii$96,4603,070
4Washington$95,22019,380
5Alaska$89,4401,870
6Massachusetts$79,42017,810
7District of Columbia$78,9702,440
8New York$78,75040,130
9Minnesota$78,16014,350
10Connecticut$77,5407,710
11New Jersey$77,25013,520
12Montana$76,7602,750
13Wisconsin$76,54014,310
14Michigan$76,27023,530
15California$76,16073,310
16Wyoming$76,1202,960
17Maine$75,3803,780
18Rhode Island$74,0902,420
19Nevada$73,5708,350
20Maryland$73,49013,690
21Indiana$68,49019,020
22Pennsylvania$67,60022,730
23Kansas$65,8606,350
24North Dakota$65,7103,570
25Missouri$65,41012,780
26West Virginia$64,8104,290
27Ohio$64,70028,950
28Delaware$63,7002,260
29Vermont$63,4301,270
30Idaho$63,0005,690
31Virginia$62,90023,630
32New Hampshire$62,8403,330
33Colorado$62,23017,010
34Utah$62,00011,450
35Louisiana$61,54010,550
36South Dakota$61,3902,980
37Tennessee$61,09017,070
38Arizona$61,06021,140
39Oklahoma$61,0108,500
40Iowa$60,86010,310
41Mississippi$60,8606,610
42Nebraska$60,8206,440
43Kentucky$59,72011,030
44South Carolina$58,7408,010
45Texas$58,57076,770
46New Mexico$58,3905,020
47Georgia$58,32021,650
48Florida$57,25049,700
49North Carolina$56,80021,640
50Alabama$55,69010,900
51Arkansas$49,0707,500

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 electricians 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 electricians 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 electrician makes?

No โ€” these are median wages across all experience levels, so half of electricians 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 electricians need a college degree?

No. Most electricians 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 Electrician Career Guide โ†’ Compare All 25 Trades โ†’ How to Become an Apprentice