Business Teachers, Postsecondary Salary

SOC Code: 25-1011 • Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, May 2024

Median Salary
$97,270
Mean Salary
$113,840
Employment
81,780
Entry Level (10th %ile)
$46,460
Top Earners (90th %ile)
$210,530

Pay Range Distribution

10th percentile
$46,460 25th percentile
$63,040 Median (50th)
$97,270 75th percentile
$140,360 90th percentile
$210,530

Business Teachers, Postsecondary Salary by State

StateMedianMeanEmploymentEntry (10th)Top (90th)
Alaska$142,230$165,250110$72,790$239,200+
District of Columbia$132,100$132,420760$65,760$212,890
California$125,310$131,9804,800$60,510$219,790
Utah$124,620$136,880430$51,140$227,730
New York$108,700$136,2608,640$51,120$239,200+
North Dakota$108,700$118,720210$54,660$211,960
New Jersey$105,230$129,6002,490$50,700$221,900
Connecticut$103,900$109,1301,280$59,490$161,830
Virginia$103,270$130,6702,850$43,800$239,200+
Maryland$102,800$124,7202,130$59,790$215,980
New Hampshire$101,830$132,740560$45,430$239,200+
Louisiana$101,620$116,460670$50,870$207,390
Michigan$100,730$117,2702,320$41,860$219,910
Rhode Island$100,370$129,010360$61,590$222,820
Massachusetts$99,600$120,9004,520$50,080$216,670
Texas$99,480$120,6507,120$46,070$214,630
Tennessee$99,280$114,3801,220$52,180$176,620
Wisconsin$98,680$113,8301,560$58,450$177,130
Nevada$98,660$108,870310$50,600$169,060
Vermont$97,260$105,940120$57,230$168,070
Pennsylvania$92,780$109,8204,280$46,380$201,670
Arizona$89,690$111,1901,670$60,170$171,550
Missouri$86,530$109,9701,540$47,200$213,590
Kansas$86,470$117,110620$47,750$228,530
Nebraska$85,110$103,620610$51,560$169,890
Washington$84,690$109,5201,110$51,780$188,430
Oregon$84,190$96,090660$38,700$164,940
Minnesota$83,360$111,3501,090$58,980$206,440
West Virginia$83,320$98,950540$40,740$170,360
Indiana$82,870$107,4502,030$43,130$209,090
Illinois$82,490$105,6803,390$36,670$210,450
Oklahoma$81,680$96,970660$38,240$169,810
Iowa$81,340$111,9001,010$46,800$221,450
Alabama$81,040$96,4901,290$44,010$168,050
Delaware$80,820$98,390300$46,850$173,860
Montana$80,590$111,350200$59,580$206,400
New Mexico$80,590$91,700460$40,960$166,640
Georgia$79,890$98,0401,710$39,530$168,260
Kentucky$79,330$93,800790$38,500$167,170
South Carolina$79,060$95,2701,540$39,030$179,980
North Carolina$78,860$101,1402,790$46,470$179,820
Maine$76,750$90,650340$43,590$161,740
Ohio$76,680$90,7403,670$35,770$168,630
Mississippi$76,060$94,010480$36,750$176,620
Idaho$75,950$91,950260$49,010$159,990
Florida$75,330$92,7702,780$49,510$159,840
Wyoming$74,200$93,420120$41,030$161,500
Colorado$73,690$88,6302,170$32,570$165,480
South Dakota$72,100$79,290230$50,750$126,910
Hawaii$65,830$80,680180$39,620$133,500
Arkansas$63,170$83,030760$50,220$135,040

Highest Paying Metro Areas

Metro AreaMedianMeanEmployment
Wilmington, NC$179,820$147,110170
Champaign-Urbana, IL$169,800$168,360380
Lawrence, KS$162,300$193,770150
Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA$158,270$155,750400
Bloomington, IL$142,310$109,300N/A
Flagstaff, AZ$141,530$127,51050
Salt Lake City-Murray, UT$140,010$158,140200
Ogden, UT$138,620$119,71040
Reno, NV$137,150$126,270100
Binghamton, NY$134,400$124,890100
Fresno, CA$134,070$133,00090
Lansing-East Lansing, MI$133,750$150,090240
York-Hanover, PA$132,550$158,850N/A
Virginia Beach-Chesapeake-Norfolk, VA-NC$132,150$134,050460
Fargo, ND-MN$131,760$138,230130
San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad, CA$131,590$134,420460
Ann Arbor, MI$131,580$143,270550
Madison, WI$131,530$168,730250
New York-Newark-Jersey City, NY-NJ$130,480$153,1807,190
Scranton--Wilkes-Barre, PA$129,100$118,430160

About Business Teachers, Postsecondary Salary Data

This data comes from the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program. The median salary represents the midpoint — half of business teachers, postsecondarys earn more and half earn less. The 10th percentile represents entry-level pay, while the 90th percentile represents the highest earners in this occupation. Employment counts represent estimated total jobs in May 2024.

Understanding Salary Percentiles

Salary percentiles show how wages are distributed across workers in this occupation. The 10th percentile represents entry-level pay — only 10% earn less. The median (50th percentile) is the true midpoint of all wages. The 90th percentile reflects top earners, typically in senior roles or high-cost metro areas. A wide gap between the 10th and 90th percentiles indicates that experience, location, and specialization significantly affect pay.

Factors That Affect Pay

Several factors influence salary for this occupation. Location is one of the biggest — the same job can pay 50% more in a high-cost metro area like San Francisco or New York compared to a rural area. Experience matters significantly; workers at the 90th percentile typically have 10-20+ years in the field. Industry also plays a role — the same occupation often pays differently in finance, technology, healthcare, or government. Education and certifications can boost pay, especially in fields that require advanced degrees or specialized licenses.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between median and mean salary?

The median is the midpoint — half earn more, half earn less. The mean (average) is the total of all salaries divided by the number of workers. The median is generally more useful because it is not skewed by a small number of extremely high earners.

Do these figures include bonuses and benefits?

No. BLS OEWS data measures base wages and salaries only. It does not include bonuses, commissions, tips, overtime, stock options, health insurance, retirement contributions, or other benefits. Total compensation may be 20-40% higher than base salary.

How reliable is this data?

The BLS OEWS survey covers approximately 1.1 million business establishments across the U.S. and uses rigorous statistical sampling methods. It is considered one of the most reliable sources of occupational wage data available. Self-employed workers and certain agricultural positions are not included.

How often is this data updated?

The BLS publishes new OEWS data annually, typically in the spring for the previous May reference period. This page shows May 2024 data, the most recent release.