Updated May 2026 · BLS OEWS 2024
Seattle vs Atlanta
Skilled-trade workers in Seattle earn an average median wage of $84,522 versus $59,780 in Atlanta, per 2024 BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics. After adjusting for cost of living, Seattle delivers $56,726 in U.S.-average purchasing power versus $56,396 for Atlanta.
Nominal Pay vs Real Pay
On nominal pay, Seattle runs ahead — $84,522 versus $59,780, a gap of $24,742. Whether that gap survives a cost-of-living adjustment is the key question, and it usually does not survive in coastal-versus-interior comparisons.
Cost of living diverges meaningfully — Seattle at index 149 versus Atlanta at 106. Seattle is the more expensive metro by 43 index points, which means a worker in Seattle needs roughly that much more in nominal pay just to match the purchasing power of a worker in Atlanta.
Once cost of living is factored in, the two metros land within $330 of each other on real take-home pay — too close to declare a meaningful winner on purchasing power alone. The decision should turn on labor demand, family considerations, and quality of life rather than dollars.
Seattle, WA
Atlanta, GA
Trade-by-Trade Comparison
| Trade | Seattle | Atlanta | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Construction Manager | $138,970 | $104,280 | +$34,690 |
| Elevator Mechanic | $137,040 | $67,510 | +$69,530 |
| Power Line Installer | $130,730 | $82,050 | +$48,680 |
| Electrical Power-Line Tech | $130,730 | $82,050 | +$48,680 |
| Ironworker | $117,110 | $48,340 | +$68,770 |
| Industrial Electrician | $106,960 | $70,190 | +$36,770 |
| Crane Operator | $106,010 | $67,230 | +$38,780 |
| Tool and Die Maker | $103,200 | $59,970 | +$43,230 |
| Sheet Metal Worker | $102,680 | $49,630 | +$53,050 |
| Electrician | $101,600 | $60,400 | +$41,200 |
| Mason (Bricklayer) | $101,120 | $89,140 | +$11,980 |
| Building Inspector | $100,330 | $65,940 | +$34,390 |
| Environmental Engineering Tech | $97,240 | $65,470 | +$31,770 |
| Plumber | $87,160 | $58,690 | +$28,470 |
| Pipefitter | $87,160 | $58,690 | +$28,470 |
| Fire Sprinkler Fitter | $87,160 | $58,690 | +$28,470 |
| Steamfitter | $87,160 | $58,690 | +$28,470 |
| Aircraft Mechanic | $86,010 | $95,920 | -$9,910 |
| Heavy Equipment Operator | $85,520 | $48,240 | +$37,280 |
| Millwright | $84,140 | $62,610 | +$21,530 |
| Diesel Mechanic | $80,850 | $60,730 | +$20,120 |
| Industrial Machinery Mechanic | $77,680 | $61,850 | +$15,830 |
| Telecommunications Tech | $77,210 | $58,690 | +$18,520 |
| Drywall Installer | $77,030 | $56,320 | +$20,710 |
| Carpenter | $76,760 | $51,390 | +$25,370 |
| HVAC Technician | $75,500 | $56,830 | +$18,670 |
| Refrigeration Mechanic | $75,500 | $56,830 | +$18,670 |
| Glazier | $75,400 | $52,050 | +$23,350 |
| Concrete Finisher | $74,700 | $48,590 | +$26,110 |
| Machinist | $73,790 | $52,810 | +$20,980 |
| Welder | $64,510 | $49,590 | +$14,920 |
| Structural Welder | $64,510 | $49,590 | +$14,920 |
| Underwater Welder | $64,510 | $49,590 | +$14,920 |
| Septic Tank Servicer | $62,830 | $48,880 | +$13,950 |
| Roofer | $62,110 | $48,990 | +$13,120 |
| Auto Mechanic | $60,450 | $51,980 | +$8,470 |
| Maintenance Mechanic | $59,590 | $48,730 | +$10,860 |
| Painter (Construction) | $59,270 | $48,640 | +$10,630 |
| Locksmith | $58,800 | $63,120 | -$4,320 |
| Floor Layer | $53,230 | $44,790 | +$8,440 |
| Insulation Worker | $49,470 | $46,830 | +$2,640 |
How These Numbers Are Calculated
Every wage figure on this page is a real BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics median, drawn from the 2024 release at bls.gov/oes. The COL-Adjusted column uses each metro's cost-of-living index to translate nominal pay into U.S.-average purchasing power. The Avg Trade Pay Score is the average of the per-trade composites for that metro — a 0-100 grade weighted on raw 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 by trade — comes from the BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook at bls.gov/ooh. Apprenticeship listings for both Seattle and Atlanta are maintained at the U.S. Department of Labor's apprenticeship.gov registry. All three are public-domain federal data sources.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do trade workers earn more in Seattle or Atlanta?
On nominal pay, Seattle earns more — $84,522 versus $59,780. After cost of living, Seattle delivers stronger real purchasing power at $56,726 versus $56,396.
What is the cost-of-living difference between Seattle and Atlanta?
Seattle carries a cost-of-living index of 149; Atlanta runs at 106. The 43-point difference means a worker needs roughly that much more nominal pay in the higher-cost metro just to match the purchasing power of the lower-cost metro.
Which metro has more skilled-trade jobs tracked?
Seattle tracks 43 trades with available BLS OEWS data; Atlanta tracks 43. Both readings come from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program at https://www.bls.gov/oes/, which surveys hundreds of thousands of employers per release.
How are these wages calculated?
Every wage figure is the median (50th percentile) annual salary for that trade in that metro from the 2024 BLS OEWS release. The cost-of-living-adjusted column uses each metro's COL index to convert nominal pay into U.S.-average purchasing power. Read the full BLS OEWS methodology at https://www.bls.gov/oes/ for survey design and percentile computation detail.
Where can I find apprenticeships in either metro?
Registered apprenticeship programs for both metros are listed on the U.S. Department of Labor's site at https://www.apprenticeship.gov/, which lets you filter by city and trade. Most skilled trades require 3-5 years of registered apprenticeship before reaching journeyman pay.
Skilled-trade workers in Seattle earn an average median wage of $84,522 versus $59,780 in Atlanta, per 2024 BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics. After adjusting for cost of living, Seattle delivers $56,726 in U.S.-average purchasing power versus $56,396 for Atlanta.
Comparing entity A and entity B on U.S. skilled-trade wage data requires lining up the underlying the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey data side by side. The table above runs the comparison on the canonical fields; the narrative below identifies the factor or factors that drive the most meaningful difference between the two.
Practical use of the comparison: read the data above, then drill into the individual entity A and entity B detail pages for the underlying breakdown. A pairwise comparison answers the relative question; the per-entity pages answer the absolute question.