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TRADEWAGES

Updated May 2026 · BLS OEWS 2024

How to Become a Machinist (2024)

Metalwork · 4-year apprenticeship · SOC 51-4041

D
44/100

Machinists earn a national median of $57,590 per 2024 BLS data, with the 90th percentile reaching $107,240 in Seattle. The standard path is a 4-year registered apprenticeship — paid from day one, no four-year degree required.

$48,630
Apprentice Pay
$57,590
Journeyman Median
$107,240
Top 10% Earn
4 years
Apprenticeship

What Does a Machinist Do?

Machinists set up and operate machine tools (lathes, milling machines, grinders) to produce precision metal parts for manufacturing, aerospace, and defense industries.

Day-to-Day Responsibilities

  • Read blueprints and engineering drawings
  • Set up and operate CNC and manual machine tools
  • Select cutting tools and materials
  • Measure finished parts with micrometers and gauges
  • Program CNC machines using G-code

The Path: How to Become a Machinist

  1. 1

    Finish high school or earn a GED

    Most apprenticeships require a high school diploma or GED. Strong math (especially algebra and geometry) and reading skills matter for trade exams and blueprint work.
  2. 2

    Find a registered apprenticeship

    Search apprenticeship.gov for registered programs in your area. Programs are sponsored by unions, contractor associations, or individual employers. Application windows are usually annual.
  3. 3

    Complete the 4-year apprenticeship

    Apprentices spend roughly 8000+ hours on the job paired with a journeyman, plus 144 classroom hours per year. Pay starts around $48,630 and steps up each year — see the timeline below.
  4. 4

    Pass the journeyman exam

    Most states require a written + practical exam to earn the journeyman license. The exam covers code knowledge, safety, and practical work scenarios. Pass rates vary 50-80% on the first attempt.
  5. 5

    Earn certifications and (optionally) the master license

    Layer on specialty certifications (NIMS Machining certifications) to access higher-paying work. Most states offer a master license after 2-4 additional years of journeyman experience — required for independent contracting in many states.
  6. 6

    Climb to the top decile

    Top earners ($107,240 in Seattle) typically reach the 90th percentile through specialization, foreman/supervisor roles, union membership, or running a small contracting business.

Machinist Apprentice Pay Timeline

Hourly wage progression based on industry-standard apprenticeship pay schedules. Actual rates vary by local union or contractor agreement.

YearStageHourlyAnnual (2,080 hr)% of Journeyman
Year 1Apprentice$42/hr$87,360150%
Year 2Apprentice 2$55/hr$114,400196%
Year 3Apprentice 3$70/hr$145,600250%
Year 4Pre-journeyman$87/hr$180,960311%
JourneymanLicensed$28/hr$57,590100%
Master / Top 10%Specialist / Foreman$52/hr$107,240186%

Required Certifications & Licenses

  • NIMS Machining certifications
  • CNC programming certifications
  • Blueprint reading certification

Skills You'll Need to Build

CNC programming (G-code)Manual machiningPrecision measurementBlueprint readingTooling selection

Work Environment

Machinists work in machine shops and manufacturing plants. Work involves standing for long periods, exposure to cutting fluids, and noise from machinery. Clean-room work for aerospace/medical parts.

Job Outlook

Steady demand in aerospace, defense, and medical device manufacturing. CNC programming skills increasingly essential. Reshoring of manufacturing boosting domestic demand.

Source: BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook.

Machinist Pay by City

The highest-paying metros for machinists, with cost-of-living-adjusted pay so you can compare real take-home.

CityMedianTop 10%Grade
Seattle, WA$73,790$107,240D
San Francisco, CA$66,320$117,850F
Boston, MA$63,600$89,280F
Portland, OR$62,350$80,710D
New York, NY$62,320$93,330F
New Orleans, LA$61,560$90,530D
Salt Lake City, UT$61,040$79,640D
Raleigh, NC$61,040$72,520D
St. Louis, MO$60,850$79,730D
Minneapolis, MN$60,470$78,190D

See all 30 cities for Machinists →

Frequently Asked Questions

Most machinists complete a 4-year registered apprenticeship — typically 8000+ hours of paid on-the-job training plus 144 classroom hours per year. After completing the apprenticeship and passing the journeyman exam, you can work independently. Master-level certification (where applicable) usually takes another 2-4 years of journeyman experience.

No. Machinists do not require a four-year college degree. The standard credential is a journeyman license earned through a paid apprenticeship registered with the U.S. Department of Labor at https://www.apprenticeship.gov/. Some workers complete a 1- or 2-year certificate at a community or trade college before applying — but the journeyman license is what employers actually require.

Machinist apprentices typically start at $48,630 per year (10th percentile) and progress upward each year of the apprenticeship. By year 3, pay usually reaches the 50th percentile around $57,590. All training is paid — apprentices are W-2 employees of contractors or unions, not students paying tuition.

Common machinist certifications include: NIMS Machining certifications; CNC programming certifications; Blueprint reading certification. Most states also require a journeyman license; some have a separate master license for independent work.

Machinists earn a national median of $57,590 (Trade Pay Score grade D), wages have grown -1% over the past 5 years, and the BLS counts roughly 113,790 machinist jobs nationwide. The work is physically demanding and the apprenticeship is real, but the trade clears the bar for living-wage, debt-free career entry.

The U.S. Department of Labor maintains a searchable database of registered apprenticeship programs at https://www.apprenticeship.gov/. Local building trades councils, IBEW/UA/IUPAT/IBB union halls, and trade school career offices also place candidates directly. Most apprenticeships have one open application window per year — check listings early.

Wage figures from BLS OEWS 2024. Apprentice pay schedules from industry-standard registered programs. Career outlook from BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook 2032 projections.