Trades Today Career Opportunities

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an electrician has to spend as an apprentice in order to take the

journeyman’s test. The national average salary for a journeyman

electrician, according to ZipRecruiter, is $68,000—significantly

more than the average college graduate is making right out of

school after that same four-year period.

Two

Job availability and future prospects

The above example—of an electrical apprentice getting their four

years of experience, hitting their required hours on the job, passing

the journeyman’s test, and leveling up to a whole new income

bracket—is illustrative of the job growth opportunities that await in

the skilled trades. Again, the trades are full of career paths where,

as your skills grow, so do your responsibilities and so does your

compensation. Those willing to put in the work—and to accept that

they’ll have a lot to learn when they get started in their careers—will

find plenty of room to grow.

There is also a broader trend in the skilled trades right now that

points to a bright future for individuals who choose a trades-related

career path. Most careers in the skilled trades are weathering

worker shortages right now, and many are projected to grow in the

next decade. This growth in demand and need will mean bigger

worker shortages unless more people start pursuing the skilled

trades. In the meantime, the higher demand and lower supply of

trades workers will create increasingly substantial levels of scarcity

on the job market, only driving trades salaries higher.

Even beyond bigger paychecks, worker shortages could lead

to other perks for workers coming into skilled trades industries,

including better benefits, signing bonuses, the opportunity for

referral bonuses once employed, and employers paying for further

training or education. If you want to start working right out of high

school but do ultimately have interest in going to college and

getting a bachelor’s degree in your career of choice, there is a