Electrical and Electronics Repairers, Powerhouse, Substation, and Relay Salary

SOC Code: 49-2095 • Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, May 2024

Median Salary
$100,940
Mean Salary
$97,460
Employment
23,040
Entry Level (10th %ile)
$60,820
Top Earners (90th %ile)
$127,970

Pay Range Distribution

10th percentile
$60,820 25th percentile
$79,930 Median (50th)
$100,940 75th percentile
$114,740 90th percentile
$127,970

Electrical and Electronics Repairers, Powerhouse, Substation, and Relay Salary by State

StateMedianMeanEmploymentEntry (10th)Top (90th)
Oregon$126,460$116,760130$77,230$144,280
Idaho$122,570$110,02070$76,400$134,470
Hawaii$121,000$115,660110$101,940$132,760
Colorado$120,320$114,340260$93,210$127,850
Massachusetts$119,720$117,660360$100,330$131,460
Arizona$118,470$101,920270$56,130$122,840
California$117,850$115,8201,880$69,820$159,090
Alaska$117,640$110,28080$53,040$139,830
Wisconsin$116,250$110,960170$76,060$136,850
North Dakota$116,010$111,48060$94,900$126,240
Minnesota$115,260$110,620100$77,920$119,800
Rhode Island$114,480$112,280120$81,280$130,140
South Dakota$111,680$102,71050$67,130$129,810
Washington$109,210$103,150520$52,330$149,610
New Jersey$108,750$103,640650$80,240$120,560
Michigan$108,450$100,270890$51,700$125,290
Montana$107,490$101,940160$90,020$115,300
Illinois$107,210$108,800800$95,920$127,690
Kansas$105,790$104,930170$88,820$121,460
Georgia$104,950$103,210660$59,040$128,350
Connecticut$104,920$103,580230$72,500$132,850
Nebraska$104,730$100,44090$81,270$109,650
Utah$104,730$101,77080$82,060$115,170
Arkansas$103,190$95,730210$66,260$108,520
Indiana$102,160$97,750300$63,420$124,720
Ohio$101,020$92,2501,210$60,510$114,140
New York$100,440$103,3002,930$82,220$130,240
Vermont$99,890$100,84040$83,960$122,630
Maryland$97,440$94,940130$54,060$126,580
North Carolina$96,730$87,1201,130$52,280$118,870
Tennessee$96,590$88,300480$47,530$110,990
Alabama$96,100$96,790340$75,120$125,360
Nevada$96,080$101,350150$59,580$143,360
Pennsylvania$95,930$89,6201,280$57,880$118,100
Florida$95,840$86,520930$53,000$110,070
West Virginia$95,270$84,380150$44,720$102,940
Texas$94,940$91,3802,450$63,480$117,630
Virginia$93,660$86,690870$57,160$107,400
Maine$93,090$89,840240$77,530$102,170
Kentucky$90,730$81,870200$41,880$105,860
Mississippi$90,690$88,370170$62,900$107,440
Oklahoma$90,430$88,500270$66,330$107,100
Iowa$88,680$87,95070$64,360$109,900
Missouri$85,690$76,130370$29,600$116,770
New Hampshire$81,150$88,740100$57,980$114,470
South Carolina$80,110$75,490290$57,430$95,200
Louisiana$79,980$85,200590$61,420$113,250
New Mexico$72,570$76,390150$47,950$109,520

Highest Paying Metro Areas

Metro AreaMedianMeanEmployment
Fresno, CA$137,470$121,94050
Anchorage, AK$136,420$126,63040
Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA$131,680$110,810260
Visalia, CA$127,350$125,52050
Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR-WA$126,460$116,34090
Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA$125,250$122,020280
Worcester, MA$124,100$118,390110
Syracuse, NY$124,050$118,680120
Phoenix-Mesa-Chandler, AZ$120,410$103,050190
Denver-Aurora-Centennial, CO$120,320$120,06090
Boston-Cambridge-Newton, MA-NH$118,550$116,370220
Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI$117,520$116,61060
San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, CA$117,420$114,470140
Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell, GA$116,330$106,500200
Providence-Warwick, RI-MA$114,480$111,950140
Grand Rapids-Wyoming-Kentwood, MI$113,310$110,67050
Peoria, IL$112,180$108,71030
Kansas City, MO-KS$111,220$101,730130
Norwich-New London-Willimantic, CT$111,200$107,96040
Indianapolis-Carmel-Greenwood, IN$111,190$106,65090

About Electrical and Electronics Repairers, Powerhouse, Substation, and Relay 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 electrical and electronics repairers, powerhouse, substation, and relays 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.