WELDER
Joins metal. Everything from your car frame to nuclear submarines. The trade with the highest variance in pay. Alaska is not a right-to-work state — union density is higher than average and prevailing wage rules cover most public projects.
The License.
Most states issue a journeyman license (allows you to work under a licensed contractor) and a separate master or contractor license (allows you to pull permits and run your own business). The journeyman license typically requires completing your apprenticeship and passing a written exam; the master/contractor license requires additional field hours — usually 2 years as a journeyman — and a separate exam.
Requirements in Alaska: confirm current hour and exam requirements directly with Alaska Division of Corporations, Business and Professional Licensing. Rules update frequently and our data reflects published standards as of early 2025.
The Money.
Pay data for this trade in Alaska. BLS metro-level data was not available for this combination. National medians shown below.
| Stage | Hourly range | Approx. annual |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 apprentice | $17–$22/hr | $34,000 – $44,000 |
| Journeyman scale | $28–$65/hr | $56,000 – $130,000 |
| BLS national median | — | $50,630 |
| BLS top 10% | — | $71,820 |
Alaska is NOT a right-to-work state. Union scale in Alaska's major metros typically runs 20–40% above the national median. Prevailing wage laws apply to most public-sector projects.
The Path.
Alaska is a State Apprenticeship Agency (SAA) state — it administers its own apprenticeship programs separately from the federal RAPIDS system. Contact the state labor department directly or visit apprenticeship.gov and filter by state.
- · Boilermakers
- · Ironworkers
- · UA (welder classification)
- · SMART
The Exam.
Industrial trade licensing in Alaska often falls under boiler, pressure vessel, or contractor rules. Confirm the applicable exam provider and code edition with the relevant board. Prevailing wage requirements in Alaska apply to most public-sector projects, which ties exam and licensure to wage scale compliance for contractors.
Be honest about pass rates. Many licensing boards do not publish them. When they do, first-time pass rates for journeyman exams in the trades typically run 50–75%. Preparation time varies — most serious candidates spend 60–120 hours on exam prep. Use code books from the correct edition, not what's currently in print.
What recruiters won't tell you.
- 01Trade school welding programs vary wildly. Community college is usually a better bet than for-profit.
- 02Pipeline welding pay is real but the work is feast-or-famine and brutally far from home.
- 03Underwater welding pays huge but has a fatality rate to match — research it honestly.
- 04Many welders develop lung issues, back issues, or eye damage — PPE discipline matters from day one.