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TRADEWAGES

Updated May 2026 · BLS OEWS 2024

Highest Paying Trades in Phoenix

Skilled-trade workers in Phoenix, AZ earn an average median wage of $63,846 across 43 tracked trades, per 2024 BLS OEWS data. With a cost-of-living index of 103, that translates to roughly $61,986 in U.S.-average purchasing power. The top-paying trade in the metro is Power Line Installer at $117,990.

43
Trades Tracked
$63,846
Avg Median Salary
103
COL Index
58
Avg Trade Pay Score

Cost of Living and Real Pay in Phoenix

Phoenix's cost-of-living index of 103 is essentially at the U.S. average. Nominal trade wages here are a reasonable proxy for real purchasing power — what you see is what you take home, with no significant adjustment needed up or down for COL. That makes Phoenix a useful baseline for comparing trade pay across the country.

The single highest-paying trade in Phoenix is Power Line Installer, with a median wage of $117,990 per BLS OEWS data. Electrical Power-Line Tech ranks second at $117,990 — a gap of $0 between #1 and #2. Wider gaps usually signal a specialty trade with steep certification or experience requirements; narrower gaps indicate broad-based wage strength across multiple skilled occupations in the metro.

Phoenix's average Trade Pay Score across all tracked trades is 58, a middle-of-the-pack C grade. Some trades in the metro deliver strong real pay; others are dragged down by either weak nominal wages or cost-of-living offsets. Use the table below to identify the trades where Phoenix compares favorably and the ones where workers may earn more elsewhere.

Trade Salaries in Phoenix

TradeCategoryMedianRange (10th-90th)GradeJobs
Power Line InstallerElectrical$117,990$52,270$129,560B1,100
Electrical Power-Line TechElectrical$117,990$52,270$129,560B1,100
Construction ManagerManagement$111,550$80,240$160,330B7,600
Elevator MechanicSpecialty$110,500$54,510$133,550B0
Aircraft MechanicAutomotive$79,650$49,270$118,390C3,010
Building InspectorManagement$78,280$55,570$114,110C2,540
Industrial ElectricianElectrical$75,220$51,720$98,300B340
Environmental Engineering TechSpecialty$72,500$50,640$95,090C210
Crane OperatorHeavy Equipment$67,960$46,640$88,830C760
Tool and Die MakerMetalwork$67,580$48,920$84,460D230
IronworkerStructural$67,010$52,160$72,560C0
Industrial Machinery MechanicIndustrial$66,110$47,230$99,950B3,210
PlumberPlumbing$62,680$46,100$99,200C9,990
PipefitterPlumbing$62,680$46,100$99,200C9,990
Fire Sprinkler FitterPlumbing$62,680$46,100$99,200C9,990
SteamfitterPlumbing$62,680$46,100$99,200C9,990
Heavy Equipment OperatorHeavy Equipment$62,210$46,820$79,520C8,390
Telecommunications TechElectrical$61,350$39,980$92,270C1,610
Diesel MechanicAutomotive$60,090$47,020$81,550C3,870
Mason (Bricklayer)Construction$60,030$43,080$75,400D1,200
ElectricianElectrical$59,940$46,610$80,260C16,740
Concrete FinisherConstruction$59,530$46,340$74,530D5,050
MachinistMetalwork$59,240$40,670$76,100D3,960
CarpenterConstruction$59,030$38,800$79,740C14,480
HVAC TechnicianHVAC$58,820$45,780$80,100C7,920
Refrigeration MechanicHVAC$58,820$45,780$80,100C7,920
PlastererConstruction$57,980$37,450$80,280D1,080
MillwrightIndustrial$57,650$47,870$105,440C760
WelderWelding$54,650$42,750$83,110C5,670
Structural WelderWelding$54,650$42,750$83,110C5,670
Underwater WelderWelding$54,650$42,750$83,110D5,670
Sheet Metal WorkerMetalwork$53,320$36,510$80,260D2,460
Solar PV InstallerElectrical$51,540$47,020$64,650B1,090
GlazierConstruction$50,740$38,120$75,250D1,600
Auto MechanicAutomotive$50,460$36,540$96,400D12,300
Drywall InstallerConstruction$49,010$36,660$66,330D2,480
Maintenance MechanicIndustrial$48,430$35,630$76,650D26,330
Tile SetterConstruction$48,340$36,010$70,940D1,240
Insulation WorkerConstruction$47,940$37,900$66,950D470
Painter (Construction)Construction$47,630$39,210$67,340F5,010
RooferConstruction$46,470$38,200$61,370D3,010
Floor LayerConstruction$46,450$44,200$66,600F140
LocksmithSpecialty$43,330$35,810$83,220D240

How These Numbers Are Calculated

Every wage figure on this page comes from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) program, published annually at bls.gov/oes. BLS surveys hundreds of thousands of employers per release; the resulting percentile wages (10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, 90th) are the gold standard for U.S. wage benchmarking. The Trade Pay Score combines raw median pay (30%), 5-year wage growth (25%), employment depth (25%), and cost-of-living-adjusted purchasing power (20%); read the full methodology.

Career outlook data — projected employment growth through 2032, typical entry-level requirements, on-the-job training expectations — comes from the BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook at bls.gov/ooh. Apprenticeship programs in the Phoenix area are listed on the U.S. Department of Labor's apprenticeship.gov registry.

Frequently Asked Questions

Which trade pays the most in Phoenix?

Power Line Installer is the highest-paying skilled trade in Phoenix, AZ, with a median annual wage of $117,990. The 90th-percentile reading reaches $129,560, with apprentices and entry-level workers starting near $52,270. That spread reflects experience, certification, and union membership.

What is the average trade salary in Phoenix?

The average median wage across all 43 skilled trades tracked in Phoenix is $63,846. With a cost-of-living index of 103, that converts to $61,986 in U.S.-average purchasing power — a downward adjustment because the metro is more expensive than average.

Are skilled-trade jobs in Phoenix growing?

Five-year wage growth across Phoenix's tracked trades varies by occupation — energy and electrification trades have generally posted the strongest gains, while general construction labor has tracked closer to inflation. Detailed projected employment growth through 2032 for each trade is published in the BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook at https://www.bls.gov/ooh/.

Where can I find apprenticeships in Phoenix?

Registered apprenticeship programs are listed on the U.S. Department of Labor's apprenticeship.gov site at https://www.apprenticeship.gov/. You can filter by city, state, and occupation. Most skilled trades require 3-5 years of registered apprenticeship before reaching journeyman pay; the per-trade pages on TradeWages list typical year-by-year apprentice pay as a percentage of journeyman scale.

How does pay in Phoenix compare to other metros?

Phoenix's average Trade Pay Score is 58/100, a mid-tier grade. The score combines nominal pay, 5-year wage growth, employment depth, and cost-of-living-adjusted purchasing power, so it captures both how much you earn and how far that income goes locally. Compare Phoenix against other metros on the best-cities-for-trades ranking page.

Skilled-trade workers in Phoenix, AZ earn an average median wage of $63,846 across 43 tracked trades, per 2024 BLS OEWS data. With a cost-of-living index of 103, that translates to roughly $61,986 in U.S.-average purchasing power. The top-paying trade in the metro is Power Line Installer at $117,990.

The this entity record above pulls directly from the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey. What follows is the per-entity context — how this entity sits in the broader U.S. skilled-trade wage data distribution and which underlying factors drive the headline numbers.

The methodology behind every numeric value on this page is publicly documented on the the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey portal and described in detail on this site’s methodology page. Refresh cadence varies by underlying series; the page surfaces the as-of date for each number so readers can trace any figure back to the source release.

Practical use of this page is in combination with the comparison and ranking pages elsewhere on the site, which surface the same data for this entity’s peers within U.S. trades, cities, and states. A single-entity reading without peer context can be misleading when an entity is an outlier on one axis but typical on another.