Updated May 2026 · BLS OEWS 2024
How to Become a Plasterer (2024)
Construction · 3-year apprenticeship · SOC 47-2161
Plasterers earn a national median of $63,149 per 2024 BLS data, with the 90th percentile reaching $105,810 in Chicago. The standard path is a 3-year registered apprenticeship — paid from day one, no four-year degree required.
What Does a Plasterer Do?
Plasterers apply plaster, stucco, and EIFS (exterior insulation finishing systems) to interior walls, ceilings, and exterior surfaces of buildings.
Day-to-Day Responsibilities
- Mix and apply plaster coats to walls and ceilings
- Apply stucco and EIFS to exterior surfaces
- Create decorative plaster elements (cornices, medallions)
- Repair damaged plaster in historic buildings
- Prepare surfaces with scratch, brown, and finish coats
The Path: How to Become a Plasterer
- 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
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
Complete the 3-year apprenticeship
Apprentices spend roughly 6000+ hours on the job paired with a journeyman, plus 144 classroom hours per year. Pay starts around $67,510 and steps up each year — see the timeline below. - 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
Earn certifications and (optionally) the master license
Layer on specialty certifications (OSHA 10/30-Hour) 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
Climb to the top decile
Top earners ($105,810 in Chicago) typically reach the 90th percentile through specialization, foreman/supervisor roles, union membership, or running a small contracting business.
Plasterer Apprentice Pay Timeline
Hourly wage progression based on industry-standard apprenticeship pay schedules. Actual rates vary by local union or contractor agreement.
| Year | Stage | Hourly | Annual (2,080 hr) | % of Journeyman |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | Apprentice | $45/hr | $93,600 | 150% |
| Year 2 | Apprentice 2 | $62/hr | $128,960 | 207% |
| Year 3 | Pre-journeyman | $82/hr | $170,560 | 273% |
| Journeyman | Licensed | $30/hr | $63,149 | 100% |
| Master / Top 10% | Specialist / Foreman | $51/hr | $105,810 | 168% |
Required Certifications & Licenses
- ✓OSHA 10/30-Hour
- ✓EIFS manufacturer certifications
- ✓Historic preservation certifications
Skills You'll Need to Build
Work Environment
Plasterers work indoors and outdoors on construction and renovation sites. Physically demanding, overhead work, mixing heavy materials, and working on scaffolding.
Job Outlook
Niche trade with steady demand in commercial construction (stucco/EIFS) and historic preservation. Experienced decorative plasterers are rare and well-compensated.
Source: BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook.
Plasterer Pay by City
The highest-paying metros for plasterers, with cost-of-living-adjusted pay so you can compare real take-home.
| City | Median | Top 10% | Grade |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chicago, IL | $90,020 | $105,810 | C |
| Boston, MA | $85,810 | $112,490 | D |
| New York, NY | $78,360 | $165,420 | F |
| St. Louis, MO | $76,540 | $80,480 | C |
| Philadelphia, PA | $76,310 | $96,390 | D |
| San Francisco, CA | $71,330 | $111,240 | F |
| Minneapolis, MN | $68,220 | $97,990 | D |
| Portland, OR | $67,820 | $98,160 | D |
| Pittsburgh, PA | $63,600 | $73,440 | D |
| Los Angeles, CA | $59,840 | $103,590 | F |
Frequently Asked Questions
Most plasterers complete a 3-year registered apprenticeship — typically 6000+ 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. Plasterers 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.
Plasterer apprentices typically start at $67,510 per year (10th percentile) and progress upward each year of the apprenticeship. By year 2, pay usually reaches the 50th percentile around $63,149. All training is paid — apprentices are W-2 employees of contractors or unions, not students paying tuition.
Common plasterer certifications include: OSHA 10/30-Hour; EIFS manufacturer certifications; Historic preservation certifications. Most states also require a journeyman license; some have a separate master license for independent work.
Plasterers earn a national median of $63,149 (Trade Pay Score grade D), wages have grown -1% over the past 5 years, and the BLS counts roughly 8,110 plasterer 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.