Updated May 2026 · BLS OEWS 2024
Skilled Trade Salaries in Arizona
Skilled-trade workers in Arizona earn an average median wage of $63,846 across 43 trades and 1 BLS-tracked metro, based on 2024 BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics. The top-paying trade in the state is Power Line Installer at $117,990.
See full Arizona trade rankings →How Arizona Compares Nationally
Trade wages in Arizona sit roughly at the national average. The state's metros average $63,846 across all tracked trades, within a few percentage points of the U.S. typical reading. That makes Arizona a representative middle-of-the-road labor market — pay neither rewards nor penalizes tradespeople relative to the rest of the country.
The highest-paying trade in Arizona is Power Line Installer at a median $117,990, followed by Electrical Power-Line Tech at $117,990. The gap between the top two trades — $0 — is a useful gauge of how concentrated the state's high-pay opportunities are. A wide gap means a single specialized trade dominates the top of the market; a narrow gap signals broad-based wage strength across multiple skilled occupations.
Arizona has a single metropolitan statistical area tracked in BLS OEWS data. That means trade wages here are effectively a one-metro reading — the figures below describe pay in that metro rather than a state-wide blend, which is the most reliable approach BLS OEWS supports for comparison.
Arizona Metro Areas
Trade Salaries in Arizona
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. State-level figures aggregate the metropolitan readings across Arizona's 1 tracked metro, weighted equally per metro to avoid over-counting any single labor market. 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%); for the full composite see the methodology page.
Career outlook detail — projected employment growth, typical entry-level requirements, on-the-job training expectations — comes from the BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook at bls.gov/ooh. Apprenticeship program listings for Arizona are maintained by the U.S. Department of Labor at apprenticeship.gov. All three are public-domain federal data sources.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the average skilled-trade wage in Arizona?
Across 43 skilled trades and 1 BLS-tracked metro, Arizona posts an average median wage of $63,846 per 2024 BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics data. Pay varies substantially by trade — from $43,330 (Locksmith) at the low end to $117,990 (Power Line Installer) at the top.
Which trade pays the most in Arizona?
Power Line Installer is the highest-paying trade in Arizona, with a state-wide median wage of $117,990 across 1 tracked metro. The next-best is Electrical Power-Line Tech at $117,990. Both reflect demand patterns specific to the state's economy — see the per-trade pages for city-level detail.
Are union or non-union trades better paid in Arizona?
BLS OEWS does not split wages by union status, but the Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes separate union-membership and earnings data at https://www.bls.gov/cps/. In broad terms, union trades pay 8-39% more than non-union counterparts in the same trade and metro, with the largest premiums in electrical, mechanical, and ironwork. State-level union density varies — northeastern and Pacific states typically run highest.
Where can I find apprenticeships in Arizona?
Registered apprenticeship programs in Arizona are listed on the U.S. Department of Labor's apprenticeship.gov site at https://www.apprenticeship.gov/, which lets you filter by state and occupation. Most skilled trades require 3-5 years of registered apprenticeship before reaching journeyman pay; the apprenticeship pages on TradeWages list year-by-year pay progression as a percentage of journeyman scale.
How does the cost of living affect trade pay in Arizona?
Cost of living shifts substantially across Arizona's metros — the state has a single tracked metro, so cost-of-living variation is captured in that one reading. The Trade Pay Score on each city page weights cost-of-living-adjusted purchasing power at 20% of the composite, so a trade with strong nominal pay in an expensive metro can still earn a lower grade than a more affordable metro with mid-range nominal wages.
Skilled-trade workers in Arizona earn an average median wage of $63,846 across 43 trades and 1 BLS-tracked metro, based on 2024 BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics. The top-paying trade in the state is Power Line Installer at $117,990.
For this entity, the underlying data on this page comes from the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey. The breakdown above is the federal record; the paragraphs below add the per-entity context that makes the headline numbers usable for a real decision rather than just a data lookup.
Every number on this page links back to the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey; the methodology page describes the inputs, refresh cadence, and known limitations of the underlying data product.
For readers using this page as a decision input, the related-entity pages elsewhere on the site provide the comparison set. The most useful comparison for this entity is typically a peer within U.S. trades, cities, and states with similar size, similar exposure, or similar geography — not the national-level summary alone.