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AZELECTRICALSOC 49-9051RAPIDS 0166RIGHT-TO-WORK

LINEMAN

in Arizona

Builds and repairs the high-voltage grid. Climbs poles, rides bucket trucks, works storms. Highest-paid common trade. Arizona is a right-to-work state — union density is lower than the national average, but licensed tradespeople still command solid wages on prevailing wage projects.

Median pay (national)
$92,560
BLS OEWS May 2024
Top 10%
$130,910
90th percentile
To journeyman
34 yrs
Licensing required
YES
check state board
§ 01

The License.

Licensing board
Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC)
Verify license / apply → https://roc.az.gov/

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 Arizona: confirm current hour and exam requirements directly with Arizona Registrar of Contractors (ROC). Rules update frequently and our data reflects published standards as of early 2025.

§ 02

The Money.

Real BLS OEWS 2025 median hourly wages for linemans in Arizona — by metro area. Union scale typically runs 20–40% above these medians on prevailing wage projects.

Metro areaMedian hourlyApprox. annual
Sierra Vista$47.07/hr$94,140
Lake Havasu City$45.42/hr$90,840
Yuma$39.69/hr$79,380
Tucson$38.72/hr$77,440
Phoenix$36.26/hr$72,520
National median (BLS)$46.28/hr$92,560

Source: BLS OEWS May 2025. These are median wages across all workers (union and non-union). Year 1 apprentice: $50,000$76,000/yr. Journeyman top of scale: $96,000$150,000/yr.

Arizona is a right-to-work state. Union scale in major Arizona metros typically runs 10–20% above the national median on public projects with prevailing wage requirements; non-union pay can run 15–30% below union scale on private work.

§ 03

The Path.

Apprenticeship length
34 years
7,000 on-the-job hours · 700 classroom hours
Education floor
HS Diploma + Algebra
Minimum age: 18 · Driver's license: Yes · Drug test: Standard

Arizona 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.

Sponsoring unions
  • · IBEW (outside construction branch)
§ 04

The Exam.

Most states use the NEC (National Electrical Code) as the basis for the journeyman and master electrician exam. Arizona may be on a different NEC edition than the current one — confirm which edition before you study. Pass rates vary significantly: some states run 50–60% first-time pass rates, others run higher. PSI Exams and Prometric administer most state electrical exams. Bring your NEC codebook (tabbed) where allowed. Note: prevailing wage rules in Arizona apply primarily to public projects — private-sector jobs in this right-to-work state are exempt.

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.

§ 05

What recruiters won't tell you.

  1. 01Fatality rate is in the top 10 of all US occupations. This is not a marketing line.
  2. 02Pre-apprenticeship lineman programs (Northwest Lineman College, etc.) cost $7K–$20K and don't guarantee work.
  3. 03Storm work is mandatory in most utility contracts. Holidays are not protected.
  4. 04CDL is functionally required even when 'not required' on paper.