[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"i-circle-flags:us":3,"blog-post-dental-hygienist-salary":8,"blog-recent-posts":35},{"left":4,"top":4,"width":5,"height":5,"rotate":4,"vFlip":6,"hFlip":6,"body":7},0,512,false,"\u003Cmask id=\"SVGuywqVbel\">\u003Ccircle cx=\"256\" cy=\"256\" r=\"256\" fill=\"#fff\"\u002F>\u003C\u002Fmask>\u003Cg mask=\"url(#SVGuywqVbel)\">\u003Cpath fill=\"#eee\" d=\"M256 0h256v64l-32 32l32 32v64l-32 32l32 32v64l-32 32l32 32v64l-256 32L0 448v-64l32-32l-32-32v-64z\"\u002F>\u003Cpath fill=\"#d80027\" d=\"M224 64h288v64H224Zm0 128h288v64H256ZM0 320h512v64H0Zm0 128h512v64H0Z\"\u002F>\u003Cpath fill=\"#0052b4\" d=\"M0 0h256v256H0Z\"\u002F>\u003Cpath fill=\"#eee\" d=\"m187 243l57-41h-70l57 41l-22-67zm-81 0l57-41H93l57 41l-22-67zm-81 0l57-41H12l57 41l-22-67zm162-81l57-41h-70l57 41l-22-67zm-81 0l57-41H93l57 41l-22-67zm-81 0l57-41H12l57 41l-22-67Zm162-82l57-41h-70l57 41l-22-67Zm-81 0l57-41H93l57 41l-22-67zm-81 0l57-41H12l57 41l-22-67Z\"\u002F>\u003C\u002Fg>",{"id":9,"locale":10,"title":11,"slug":12,"excerpt":13,"content":14,"content_html":15,"meta":16,"author_label":19,"published_at":20,"reading_time_minutes":21,"view_count":22,"featured_image":23,"category":27},"01ksjabyrax09pzvjcen3tdhfy","en","Dental Hygienist Salary in 2026: What Dental Hygienists Earn","dental-hygienist-salary","Dental hygienists earn a median of $94,260 a year (BLS, 2024). Here is how pay shifts with work setting, experience, and location across the country.","Dental hygiene is one of the steadier, better-paid healthcare careers a person can enter without a four-year degree. Dental hygienists held about 221,600 jobs in 2024, and according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), they earn a median wage close to double the national average for all jobs. The role sits inside one of the largest and most stable corners of American healthcare — preventive dentistry — and the credential to practice it can be earned in roughly three years.\r\n\r\nThis guide breaks down what dental hygienists actually earn in 2026 — the national median, how pay shifts with work setting and schedule, and how location changes the number. All figures come from the most recent BLS data (the May 2024 release).\r\n\r\n## What the typical dental hygienist earns\r\n\r\nThe median annual wage for dental hygienists was **$94,260** in May 2024. *Median* means half of all dental hygienists earned more than that figure and half earned less. For comparison, the median wage across all U.S. occupations was $49,500.\r\n\r\nThe full range is wide:\r\n\r\n- The lowest-paid 10% of dental hygienists earned less than **$66,470**.\r\n- The highest-paid 10% earned more than **$120,060**.\r\n\r\nThat spread — roughly $66,000 to $120,000 — is the most important thing to understand about dental hygienist pay. \"Hygienist salary\" is not a single number; it depends on where the hygienist works, how many days a week they work, and what state they are licensed in. Two hygienists with the same diploma and the same year of graduation can easily be $30,000 apart on annual pay because of those three variables alone.\r\n\r\n## Dental hygienist pay by work setting\r\n\r\nDental hygiene is unusual among healthcare careers in how concentrated it is — nearly all hygienists work in dentists' offices, and the small share who work elsewhere have very different pay profiles. BLS reports these median wages by employer type:\r\n\r\n| Work setting                                                  | Median dental hygienist pay (2024) |\r\n| ------------------------------------------------------------- | ---------------------------------- |\r\n| Offices of dentists                                           | $94,570                            |\r\n| Offices of physicians                                         | $84,720                            |\r\n| Government (excluding state\u002Flocal education and hospitals)    | $77,940                            |\r\n\r\nAbout 94% of dental hygienists work in dentists' offices, and that setting pays just above the national median for the role. The smaller share who work in physicians' offices or in government posts — public-health clinics, military bases, federal facilities, Indian Health Service sites — typically earn less, often in exchange for benefits, a steadier schedule, or a defined-benefit retirement plan. The gap between the top and bottom setting is about $16,000 a year for the same core credential. Hygienists weighing private practice against a government role usually do the math on total compensation rather than headline pay, because the lower-paid settings often add health, pension, and paid-leave benefits that private dental offices do not match.\r\n\r\n## Experience and schedule\r\n\r\nExperience moves the number, but in dental hygiene the schedule itself is just as important. BLS reports that many dental hygienists work part time, and that dentists often hire hygienists to cover only a few days a week. Some hygienists work for two or three different practices to assemble a full-time week of hours, while others use the part-time structure intentionally to fit family life, school, or a second career.\r\n\r\nThat structure is why the wage range matters more than the median for most people thinking about the career. A new-graduate hygienist working three days a week in a single practice will land in a very different place from an experienced hygienist working full-time hours across two practices in a high-paying metro. The hourly rate for dental hygiene is strong; the annual figure each hygienist takes home depends largely on how many of those hours they choose — or are able — to work.\r\n\r\nSpecialty has a smaller effect on dental hygienist pay than it does in nursing or other clinical fields, because the day-to-day scope is fairly standard from office to office. Where state law allows it, hygienists with additional training (sometimes called *dental therapists*) can perform some restorative work, and that can lift earnings; otherwise, the biggest paid-experience premium comes from years on the chair and from the patient volume a practice can put through.\r\n\r\n## Where dental hygienists earn the most\r\n\r\nDental hygienist wages vary widely from state to state, and even between metro areas within the same state. Two forces drive that: local cost of living and local demand for hygienists. A median wage in a high-cost coastal metro can sit tens of thousands of dollars above the same role in a lower-cost rural area, and within a single state the figure for a major city can run well ahead of the figure for a small town two hours away.\r\n\r\nBecause those figures are updated every year and differ for all 50 states, the most reliable source for a location-specific number is the BLS [Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F) program, which publishes median dental hygienist wages for every state and metropolitan area. Anyone weighing a job offer should check the figure for their specific state and city rather than relying on the national median — and then compare it to the local cost of living before deciding whether the move pencils out.\r\n\r\n## The job outlook for dental hygienists\r\n\r\nPay is only half the picture; job security is the other. BLS projects employment of dental hygienists to grow **7% from 2024 to 2034**, much faster than the average for all occupations, with about **15,300 openings every year** over the decade. An aging population that is keeping more of its original teeth, growing evidence linking oral health to general health, and state-level expansions of what hygienists are allowed to do all feed that demand. Many of those projected openings are not net-new positions — they reflect hygienists leaving the role to retire or move into related fields, leaving a steady churn of seats for new graduates to fill. For a credential that takes roughly three years to earn, that is an unusually steady outlook.\r\n\r\n## How dental hygienists qualify\r\n\r\nDental hygienists typically need an associate's degree in dental hygiene, and most programs take about three years to complete. Programs are offered at community colleges, technical schools, and universities, and cover anatomy, periodontics, medical ethics, and supervised clinical practice. Most programs also require applicants to complete prerequisite college-level coursework in biology, chemistry, and math before they apply. Bachelor's degrees in dental hygiene are also available and are usually required for research, teaching, or public-health roles; a small number of master's programs exist for hygienists who want to move into education or administration.\r\n\r\nEvery state requires dental hygienists to be licensed. In most states, licensure means graduating from an accredited dental hygiene program and passing both a written and a clinical examination, and most states require continuing education hours to maintain the license over time. Many jobs also require current CPR certification, and individual states set their own rules on which procedures a hygienist can perform without direct dentist supervision. For specific requirements, the State Board of Dental Examiners in each state publishes the current rules.\r\n\r\n## A note on your dental hygiene credential\r\n\r\nA dental hygiene credential is one many hygienists want to display once they have earned it. If your original has been lost or damaged, your school or certifying board can issue an official replacement for any formal purpose. For a framed copy to hang at home or in an office, DiplomaCraft also offers replica [professional certificates](https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Fcertificate) for display and novelty use.\r\n\r\n## Sources\r\n\r\n- Wage, employment, and outlook data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, *Occupational Outlook Handbook*, [Dental Hygienists](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Fooh\u002Fhealthcare\u002Fdental-hygienists.htm), reflecting the May 2024 Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics release (updated August 2025).\r\n- State and metro wage data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, [Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS)](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F).\r\n\r\nAll wage figures are medians and reflect the most recent BLS data available as of 2026. Actual pay varies by employer, location, experience, and schedule.","\u003Cp>Dental hygiene is one of the steadier, better-paid healthcare careers a person can enter without a four-year degree. Dental hygienists held about 221,600 jobs in 2024, and according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), they earn a median wage close to double the national average for all jobs. The role sits inside one of the largest and most stable corners of American healthcare — preventive dentistry — and the credential to practice it can be earned in roughly three years.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>This guide breaks down what dental hygienists actually earn in 2026 — the national median, how pay shifts with work setting and schedule, and how location changes the number. All figures come from the most recent BLS data (the May 2024 release).\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>What the typical dental hygienist earns\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>The median annual wage for dental hygienists was \u003Cstrong>$94,260\u003C\u002Fstrong> in May 2024. \u003Cem>Median\u003C\u002Fem> means half of all dental hygienists earned more than that figure and half earned less. For comparison, the median wage across all U.S. occupations was $49,500.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>The full range is wide:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>The lowest-paid 10% of dental hygienists earned less than \u003Cstrong>$66,470\u003C\u002Fstrong>.\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003Cli>The highest-paid 10% earned more than \u003Cstrong>$120,060\u003C\u002Fstrong>.\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Ful>\n\u003Cp>That spread — roughly $66,000 to $120,000 — is the most important thing to understand about dental hygienist pay. &quot;Hygienist salary&quot; is not a single number; it depends on where the hygienist works, how many days a week they work, and what state they are licensed in. Two hygienists with the same diploma and the same year of graduation can easily be $30,000 apart on annual pay because of those three variables alone.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Dental hygienist pay by work setting\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Dental hygiene is unusual among healthcare careers in how concentrated it is — nearly all hygienists work in dentists' offices, and the small share who work elsewhere have very different pay profiles. BLS reports these median wages by employer type:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ctable>\n\u003Cthead>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Cth>Work setting\u003C\u002Fth>\n\u003Cth>Median dental hygienist pay (2024)\u003C\u002Fth>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003C\u002Fthead>\n\u003Ctbody>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Offices of dentists\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$94,570\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Offices of physicians\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$84,720\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Government (excluding state\u002Flocal education and hospitals)\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$77,940\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003C\u002Ftbody>\n\u003C\u002Ftable>\n\u003Cp>About 94% of dental hygienists work in dentists' offices, and that setting pays just above the national median for the role. The smaller share who work in physicians' offices or in government posts — public-health clinics, military bases, federal facilities, Indian Health Service sites — typically earn less, often in exchange for benefits, a steadier schedule, or a defined-benefit retirement plan. The gap between the top and bottom setting is about $16,000 a year for the same core credential. Hygienists weighing private practice against a government role usually do the math on total compensation rather than headline pay, because the lower-paid settings often add health, pension, and paid-leave benefits that private dental offices do not match.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Experience and schedule\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Experience moves the number, but in dental hygiene the schedule itself is just as important. BLS reports that many dental hygienists work part time, and that dentists often hire hygienists to cover only a few days a week. Some hygienists work for two or three different practices to assemble a full-time week of hours, while others use the part-time structure intentionally to fit family life, school, or a second career.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>That structure is why the wage range matters more than the median for most people thinking about the career. A new-graduate hygienist working three days a week in a single practice will land in a very different place from an experienced hygienist working full-time hours across two practices in a high-paying metro. The hourly rate for dental hygiene is strong; the annual figure each hygienist takes home depends largely on how many of those hours they choose — or are able — to work.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Specialty has a smaller effect on dental hygienist pay than it does in nursing or other clinical fields, because the day-to-day scope is fairly standard from office to office. Where state law allows it, hygienists with additional training (sometimes called \u003Cem>dental therapists\u003C\u002Fem>) can perform some restorative work, and that can lift earnings; otherwise, the biggest paid-experience premium comes from years on the chair and from the patient volume a practice can put through.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Where dental hygienists earn the most\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Dental hygienist wages vary widely from state to state, and even between metro areas within the same state. Two forces drive that: local cost of living and local demand for hygienists. A median wage in a high-cost coastal metro can sit tens of thousands of dollars above the same role in a lower-cost rural area, and within a single state the figure for a major city can run well ahead of the figure for a small town two hours away.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Because those figures are updated every year and differ for all 50 states, the most reliable source for a location-specific number is the BLS \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F\">Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics\u003C\u002Fa> program, which publishes median dental hygienist wages for every state and metropolitan area. Anyone weighing a job offer should check the figure for their specific state and city rather than relying on the national median — and then compare it to the local cost of living before deciding whether the move pencils out.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>The job outlook for dental hygienists\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Pay is only half the picture; job security is the other. BLS projects employment of dental hygienists to grow \u003Cstrong>7% from 2024 to 2034\u003C\u002Fstrong>, much faster than the average for all occupations, with about \u003Cstrong>15,300 openings every year\u003C\u002Fstrong> over the decade. An aging population that is keeping more of its original teeth, growing evidence linking oral health to general health, and state-level expansions of what hygienists are allowed to do all feed that demand. Many of those projected openings are not net-new positions — they reflect hygienists leaving the role to retire or move into related fields, leaving a steady churn of seats for new graduates to fill. For a credential that takes roughly three years to earn, that is an unusually steady outlook.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>How dental hygienists qualify\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Dental hygienists typically need an associate's degree in dental hygiene, and most programs take about three years to complete. Programs are offered at community colleges, technical schools, and universities, and cover anatomy, periodontics, medical ethics, and supervised clinical practice. Most programs also require applicants to complete prerequisite college-level coursework in biology, chemistry, and math before they apply. Bachelor's degrees in dental hygiene are also available and are usually required for research, teaching, or public-health roles; a small number of master's programs exist for hygienists who want to move into education or administration.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Every state requires dental hygienists to be licensed. In most states, licensure means graduating from an accredited dental hygiene program and passing both a written and a clinical examination, and most states require continuing education hours to maintain the license over time. Many jobs also require current CPR certification, and individual states set their own rules on which procedures a hygienist can perform without direct dentist supervision. For specific requirements, the State Board of Dental Examiners in each state publishes the current rules.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>A note on your dental hygiene credential\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>A dental hygiene credential is one many hygienists want to display once they have earned it. If your original has been lost or damaged, your school or certifying board can issue an official replacement for any formal purpose. For a framed copy to hang at home or in an office, DiplomaCraft also offers replica \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Fcertificate\">professional certificates\u003C\u002Fa> for display and novelty use.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Sources\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>Wage, employment, and outlook data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, \u003Cem>Occupational Outlook Handbook\u003C\u002Fem>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Fooh\u002Fhealthcare\u002Fdental-hygienists.htm\">Dental Hygienists\u003C\u002Fa>, reflecting the May 2024 Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics release (updated August 2025).\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003Cli>State and metro wage data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F\">Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS)\u003C\u002Fa>.\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Ful>\n\u003Cp>All wage figures are medians and reflect the most recent BLS data available as of 2026. Actual pay varies by employer, location, experience, and schedule.\u003C\u002Fp>\n",{"title":17,"description":18},"Dental Hygienist Salary in 2026: What Dental Hygienists Earn | DiplomaCraft","Dental hygienists earn a median of $94,260 a year (BLS, 2024). See how pay varies by setting, experience, and where dental hygienists earn the most.","DiplomaCraft Team","2026-05-14T14:13:00+00:00",7,2,{"url":24,"thumb_url":25,"hero_url":26},"\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksjabyrg71cw966qvrzkef2d\u002Fdental-hygienist.jpg","\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksjabyrg71cw966qvrzkef2d\u002Fconversions\u002Fdental-hygienist-thumb.jpg","\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksjabyrg71cw966qvrzkef2d\u002Fconversions\u002Fdental-hygienist-hero.jpg",{"id":28,"name":29,"slug":30,"description":31,"meta":32,"sort_order":34},"01kjbmd4sqces5e7qjrc3vmzr8","Salary","salary","Salary guides, earning potential by degree, and compensation insights.",{"title":33,"description":33},"",10,[36,54,71,94],{"id":37,"locale":10,"title":38,"slug":39,"excerpt":40,"content":41,"content_html":42,"meta":43,"author_label":19,"published_at":46,"reading_time_minutes":21,"view_count":47,"featured_image":48,"category":52},"01ksjbgpxd43629cpnbwtf3jyc","Surgical Technologist Salary in 2026: What Surgical Technologists Earn","surgical-technologist-salary","Surgical technologists earn a median of $62,830 a year (BLS, 2024). See how pay shifts by work setting, specialty, and where surgical techs earn the most.","Surgical technologists are the operating-room professionals who scrub in alongside surgeons, prepare the sterile field, set up instruments, and pass tools during a procedure. About 115,600 of them were working in the United States in 2024, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), most of them in hospital operating rooms. The role sits at the intersection of clinical training and technical skill — a position the surgical team cannot run a case without.\r\n\r\nThis guide breaks down what surgical technologists actually earn in 2026 — the national median, how pay shifts with work setting and specialty, and how location and certification change the number. All figures come from the most recent BLS data (the May 2024 release).\r\n\r\n## What the typical surgical technologist earns\r\n\r\nThe median annual wage for surgical technologists was **$62,830** in May 2024. *Median* means half of all surgical techs earned more than that figure and half earned less. For comparison, the median wage across all U.S. occupations was $49,500, so a surgical tech earns roughly 27% more than the typical American worker.\r\n\r\nThe full range is wide:\r\n\r\n- The lowest-paid 10% of surgical technologists earned less than **$43,290**.\r\n- The highest-paid 10% earned more than **$90,700**.\r\n\r\nThat spread — roughly $43,000 to $91,000 — is the most important thing to understand about surgical tech pay. \"Surgical technologist salary\" is not a single number; it depends heavily on where a tech works, what surgical specialty they support, and how long they have been in the operating room.\r\n\r\n## Surgical technologist pay by work setting\r\n\r\nWhere a surgical tech works is one of the biggest factors in pay. BLS reports these median wages by employer type for surgical technologists:\r\n\r\n| Work setting                              | Median pay (2024) |\r\n| ----------------------------------------- | ----------------- |\r\n| Outpatient care centers                   | $63,270           |\r\n| Hospitals (state, local & private)        | $63,260           |\r\n| Offices of physicians                     | $61,350           |\r\n| Administrative and support services       | $61,040           |\r\n| Offices of dentists                       | $48,910           |\r\n\r\nHospitals employ about 71% of all surgical technologists, and they pay essentially in line with the national median. Outpatient care centers — a category that includes the rapidly growing ambulatory surgery center sector — pay slightly more on average and account for about 11% of jobs. Offices of physicians employ another 10% and pay a bit below the hospital rate. The gap between the top setting and offices of dentists is more than $14,000 a year for the same core credential, which is why setting matters as much as experience when comparing offers.\r\n\r\nIt is worth noting that hospital roles, while paying in line with the median, often carry shift differentials, on-call pay, and overtime that the published median figure does not capture. A surgical tech on a hospital night-and-weekend rotation can earn meaningfully more than the same tech in a 9-to-5 outpatient center, even when the base wages look similar.\r\n\r\n## Experience and specialty\r\n\r\nThe other major factor is experience and specialty. New-graduate surgical technologists typically start near the lower end of the range, while techs with several years in the OR — especially in high-acuity specialties such as cardiothoracic, orthopedic, or neurosurgery — earn toward the top. These specialties involve longer cases, more complex instrumentation, and dedicated specialty rotations that hospitals reward financially.\r\n\r\nSurgical technologists who advance into the surgical first assistant role earn more still. Surgical first assistants take a hands-on part in the procedure itself — suctioning, suturing, retracting — and BLS reports a separate median wage of $60,290 for surgical assistants as a distinct occupation, with the highest 10% earning more than $102,390. The first-assist track typically requires additional training and certification on top of a surgical technology credential, and it represents the clearest upward step within the operating-room career path.\r\n\r\nTravel surgical tech contracts are another way experienced techs lift their pay. Hospitals struggling to fill OR positions often bring in contract techs at premium rates, sometimes with housing stipends on top of the hourly wage. These contracts usually require at least two years of experience and a current CST credential, and they tend to favor techs willing to relocate every few months.\r\n\r\n## Where surgical technologists earn the most\r\n\r\nSurgical technologist wages vary widely from state to state, and even between metro areas within the same state. Two forces drive that: local cost of living and local demand for OR staff. A median wage in a high-cost coastal metro can sit well above the same role in a lower-cost rural area, and states with shortages of certified techs often pay sign-on bonuses on top of base pay.\r\n\r\nBecause those figures are updated every year and differ for all 50 states, the most reliable source for a location-specific number is the BLS [Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F) program, which publishes median surgical technologist wages for every state and metropolitan area. Anyone weighing a surgical tech job offer should check the figure for their specific state and city rather than relying on the national median.\r\n\r\n## The job outlook for surgical technologists\r\n\r\nPay is only half the picture; job security is the other. BLS projects employment of surgical technologists to grow **4% from 2024 to 2034**, about on pace with the average for all occupations. The combined category of surgical assistants and technologists is projected to grow 5%, with about **8,700 openings every year** over the decade.\r\n\r\nTwo forces drive that demand. The aging U.S. population is increasing the volume of surgical procedures across the board — joint replacements, cardiac procedures, cataract surgeries, and more. And outpatient surgery is shifting from hospital operating rooms into ambulatory surgery centers, which adds new tech positions in that fast-growing setting. Most projected openings will come from replacing workers who retire or move into other healthcare roles, which keeps the entry pipeline steady.\r\n\r\n## How surgical technologists qualify\r\n\r\nSurgical technologists typically reach the role through a certificate or associate's degree program in surgical technology. The most widely recognized path is a program accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP), offered at community colleges, vocational schools, some hospitals, and a smaller number of universities. Coursework covers anatomy, microbiology, sterilization, instrument identification, and patient safety, and every program includes supervised clinical hours in a real operating room.\r\n\r\nCertification is not legally required in every state, but most employers prefer or require it. The most common credential is the Certified Surgical Technologist (CST), issued by the National Board of Surgical Technology and Surgical Assisting (NBSTSA) after passing an exam. Holding the CST is widely treated as the baseline for hospital employment and is often a prerequisite for travel contracts. Maintaining the credential requires continuing education credits or periodic re-examination, which keeps techs current on new instruments, robotic platforms, and infection-control practices.\r\n\r\nA growing number of states regulate the profession directly; requirements vary by state, so prospective techs should check with their state licensing agency before enrolling in a program. Most accredited programs take 12 to 24 months to complete, and many include a final clinical rotation that doubles as a job pipeline — students often receive offers from the hospital or surgery center where they trained.\r\n\r\n## A note on your surgical technology credential\r\n\r\nA surgical technology credential is one many surgical techs want to display once they have earned it. If your original has been lost or damaged, your program or the NBSTSA can issue an official replacement for any formal purpose. For a framed copy to hang at home or in an office, DiplomaCraft also offers replica [professional certificates](https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Fcertificate) for display and novelty use.\r\n\r\n## Sources\r\n\r\n- Wage, employment, and outlook data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, *Occupational Outlook Handbook*, [Surgical Assistants and Technologists](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Fooh\u002Fhealthcare\u002Fsurgical-technologists.htm), reflecting the May 2024 Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics release (updated August 2025).\r\n- State and metro wage data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, [Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS)](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F).\r\n\r\nAll wage figures are medians and reflect the most recent BLS data available as of 2026. Actual pay varies by employer, location, experience, and specialty.","\u003Cp>Surgical technologists are the operating-room professionals who scrub in alongside surgeons, prepare the sterile field, set up instruments, and pass tools during a procedure. About 115,600 of them were working in the United States in 2024, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), most of them in hospital operating rooms. The role sits at the intersection of clinical training and technical skill — a position the surgical team cannot run a case without.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>This guide breaks down what surgical technologists actually earn in 2026 — the national median, how pay shifts with work setting and specialty, and how location and certification change the number. All figures come from the most recent BLS data (the May 2024 release).\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>What the typical surgical technologist earns\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>The median annual wage for surgical technologists was \u003Cstrong>$62,830\u003C\u002Fstrong> in May 2024. \u003Cem>Median\u003C\u002Fem> means half of all surgical techs earned more than that figure and half earned less. For comparison, the median wage across all U.S. occupations was $49,500, so a surgical tech earns roughly 27% more than the typical American worker.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>The full range is wide:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>The lowest-paid 10% of surgical technologists earned less than \u003Cstrong>$43,290\u003C\u002Fstrong>.\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003Cli>The highest-paid 10% earned more than \u003Cstrong>$90,700\u003C\u002Fstrong>.\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Ful>\n\u003Cp>That spread — roughly $43,000 to $91,000 — is the most important thing to understand about surgical tech pay. &quot;Surgical technologist salary&quot; is not a single number; it depends heavily on where a tech works, what surgical specialty they support, and how long they have been in the operating room.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Surgical technologist pay by work setting\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Where a surgical tech works is one of the biggest factors in pay. BLS reports these median wages by employer type for surgical technologists:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ctable>\n\u003Cthead>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Cth>Work setting\u003C\u002Fth>\n\u003Cth>Median pay (2024)\u003C\u002Fth>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003C\u002Fthead>\n\u003Ctbody>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Outpatient care centers\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$63,270\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Hospitals (state, local &amp; private)\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$63,260\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Offices of physicians\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$61,350\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Administrative and support services\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$61,040\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Offices of dentists\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$48,910\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003C\u002Ftbody>\n\u003C\u002Ftable>\n\u003Cp>Hospitals employ about 71% of all surgical technologists, and they pay essentially in line with the national median. Outpatient care centers — a category that includes the rapidly growing ambulatory surgery center sector — pay slightly more on average and account for about 11% of jobs. Offices of physicians employ another 10% and pay a bit below the hospital rate. The gap between the top setting and offices of dentists is more than $14,000 a year for the same core credential, which is why setting matters as much as experience when comparing offers.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>It is worth noting that hospital roles, while paying in line with the median, often carry shift differentials, on-call pay, and overtime that the published median figure does not capture. A surgical tech on a hospital night-and-weekend rotation can earn meaningfully more than the same tech in a 9-to-5 outpatient center, even when the base wages look similar.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Experience and specialty\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>The other major factor is experience and specialty. New-graduate surgical technologists typically start near the lower end of the range, while techs with several years in the OR — especially in high-acuity specialties such as cardiothoracic, orthopedic, or neurosurgery — earn toward the top. These specialties involve longer cases, more complex instrumentation, and dedicated specialty rotations that hospitals reward financially.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Surgical technologists who advance into the surgical first assistant role earn more still. Surgical first assistants take a hands-on part in the procedure itself — suctioning, suturing, retracting — and BLS reports a separate median wage of $60,290 for surgical assistants as a distinct occupation, with the highest 10% earning more than $102,390. The first-assist track typically requires additional training and certification on top of a surgical technology credential, and it represents the clearest upward step within the operating-room career path.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Travel surgical tech contracts are another way experienced techs lift their pay. Hospitals struggling to fill OR positions often bring in contract techs at premium rates, sometimes with housing stipends on top of the hourly wage. These contracts usually require at least two years of experience and a current CST credential, and they tend to favor techs willing to relocate every few months.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Where surgical technologists earn the most\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Surgical technologist wages vary widely from state to state, and even between metro areas within the same state. Two forces drive that: local cost of living and local demand for OR staff. A median wage in a high-cost coastal metro can sit well above the same role in a lower-cost rural area, and states with shortages of certified techs often pay sign-on bonuses on top of base pay.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Because those figures are updated every year and differ for all 50 states, the most reliable source for a location-specific number is the BLS \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F\">Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics\u003C\u002Fa> program, which publishes median surgical technologist wages for every state and metropolitan area. Anyone weighing a surgical tech job offer should check the figure for their specific state and city rather than relying on the national median.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>The job outlook for surgical technologists\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Pay is only half the picture; job security is the other. BLS projects employment of surgical technologists to grow \u003Cstrong>4% from 2024 to 2034\u003C\u002Fstrong>, about on pace with the average for all occupations. The combined category of surgical assistants and technologists is projected to grow 5%, with about \u003Cstrong>8,700 openings every year\u003C\u002Fstrong> over the decade.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Two forces drive that demand. The aging U.S. population is increasing the volume of surgical procedures across the board — joint replacements, cardiac procedures, cataract surgeries, and more. And outpatient surgery is shifting from hospital operating rooms into ambulatory surgery centers, which adds new tech positions in that fast-growing setting. Most projected openings will come from replacing workers who retire or move into other healthcare roles, which keeps the entry pipeline steady.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>How surgical technologists qualify\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Surgical technologists typically reach the role through a certificate or associate's degree program in surgical technology. The most widely recognized path is a program accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs (CAAHEP), offered at community colleges, vocational schools, some hospitals, and a smaller number of universities. Coursework covers anatomy, microbiology, sterilization, instrument identification, and patient safety, and every program includes supervised clinical hours in a real operating room.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Certification is not legally required in every state, but most employers prefer or require it. The most common credential is the Certified Surgical Technologist (CST), issued by the National Board of Surgical Technology and Surgical Assisting (NBSTSA) after passing an exam. Holding the CST is widely treated as the baseline for hospital employment and is often a prerequisite for travel contracts. Maintaining the credential requires continuing education credits or periodic re-examination, which keeps techs current on new instruments, robotic platforms, and infection-control practices.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>A growing number of states regulate the profession directly; requirements vary by state, so prospective techs should check with their state licensing agency before enrolling in a program. Most accredited programs take 12 to 24 months to complete, and many include a final clinical rotation that doubles as a job pipeline — students often receive offers from the hospital or surgery center where they trained.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>A note on your surgical technology credential\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>A surgical technology credential is one many surgical techs want to display once they have earned it. If your original has been lost or damaged, your program or the NBSTSA can issue an official replacement for any formal purpose. For a framed copy to hang at home or in an office, DiplomaCraft also offers replica \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Fcertificate\">professional certificates\u003C\u002Fa> for display and novelty use.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Sources\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>Wage, employment, and outlook data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, \u003Cem>Occupational Outlook Handbook\u003C\u002Fem>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Fooh\u002Fhealthcare\u002Fsurgical-technologists.htm\">Surgical Assistants and Technologists\u003C\u002Fa>, reflecting the May 2024 Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics release (updated August 2025).\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003Cli>State and metro wage data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F\">Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS)\u003C\u002Fa>.\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Ful>\n\u003Cp>All wage figures are medians and reflect the most recent BLS data available as of 2026. Actual pay varies by employer, location, experience, and specialty.\u003C\u002Fp>\n",{"title":44,"description":45},"Surgical Technologist Salary in 2026: What Surgical Technologists Earn | DiplomaCraft","Surgical technologists earn a median of $62,830 a year (BLS, 2024). See how pay varies by setting, specialty, and where surgical technologists earn the most.","2026-05-26T05:37:00+00:00",4,{"url":49,"thumb_url":50,"hero_url":51},"\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksjbgpxky2akx3829b53d606\u002Fsurgical-technologist.jpg","\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksjbgpxky2akx3829b53d606\u002Fconversions\u002Fsurgical-technologist-thumb.jpg","\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksjbgpxky2akx3829b53d606\u002Fconversions\u002Fsurgical-technologist-hero.jpg",{"id":28,"name":29,"slug":30,"description":31,"meta":53,"sort_order":34},{"title":33,"description":33},{"id":55,"locale":10,"title":56,"slug":57,"excerpt":58,"content":59,"content_html":60,"meta":61,"author_label":19,"published_at":64,"reading_time_minutes":21,"view_count":47,"featured_image":65,"category":69},"01ksjbcjrxy8whqk36jsf2gvg9","Respiratory Therapist Salary in 2026: What Respiratory Therapists Earn","respiratory-therapist-salary","Respiratory therapists earn a median of $80,450 a year (BLS, 2024). Here is how RT pay shifts with work setting, specialty, and location.","Respiratory therapists (RTs) are a small but critical part of the American healthcare workforce — about 139,600 of them in 2024, running ventilators in ICUs and NICUs, treating asthma and COPD on the floors, and managing breathing emergencies in the ER. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), they earn well above the national median for all jobs, and demand for them is growing much faster than average.\r\n\r\nThis guide breaks down what respiratory therapists actually earn in 2026 — the national median, how pay shifts with work setting and specialty, the credentials that move the number, and how location changes everything. All figures come from the most recent BLS data (the May 2024 release).\r\n\r\n## What the typical respiratory therapist earns\r\n\r\nThe median annual wage for respiratory therapists was **$80,450** in May 2024. *Median* means half of all RTs earned more than that figure and half earned less. For comparison, the median wage across all U.S. occupations was $49,500.\r\n\r\nThe full range is wide:\r\n\r\n- The lowest-paid 10% of respiratory therapists earned less than **$61,900**.\r\n- The highest-paid 10% earned more than **$108,820**.\r\n\r\nThat spread — roughly $62,000 to $109,000 — is the most important thing to understand about RT pay. \"Respiratory therapist salary\" is not a single number; it depends heavily on where a therapist works, how long they have been working, and which patients they specialize in treating.\r\n\r\n## Respiratory therapist pay by work setting\r\n\r\nWhere a respiratory therapist works affects pay, though less dramatically than in some other healthcare occupations. BLS reports these median wages by employer type:\r\n\r\n| Work setting                                       | Median RT pay (2024) |\r\n| -------------------------------------------------- | -------------------- |\r\n| Hospitals (state, local & private)                 | $80,660              |\r\n| Nursing care facilities (skilled nursing)          | $75,910              |\r\n| Offices of physicians                              | $75,240              |\r\n\r\nHospitals dominate this profession in a way that few healthcare roles match: about **80%** of all respiratory therapists work in a hospital, and the hospital median sits right at the national figure for the role. The remaining RTs are spread across skilled nursing facilities, physician offices, home health agencies, and outpatient clinics — all of which pay several thousand dollars below the hospital median. The gap between the top and bottom setting is only about $5,000 a year, which makes RT pay unusually tight by healthcare standards.\r\n\r\nThat tight band is partly a function of where the work actually lives. Hospitals concentrate the ventilator patients, the NICU babies, and the after-hours codes that respiratory therapists are uniquely trained to handle, so the role's pay scale is effectively set inside that one sector. Nursing facility and physician-office work tends to involve more routine pulmonary testing, oxygen-therapy management, and patient teaching — important, but typically scheduled day shifts without the differential pay that hospital nights and weekends add on top of the base.\r\n\r\n## Experience and specialty\r\n\r\nThe other major factor is experience. New-graduate respiratory therapists typically start near the lower end of the range with the Certified Respiratory Therapist (CRT) credential. Therapists who advance to the Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT) credential — and add high-acuity experience — move toward the upper end.\r\n\r\nSpecialty matters as much as years on the job. Neonatal\u002Fpediatric specialists working in NICUs, adult critical care RTs running ventilators in the ICU, and sleep-disorder specialists administering polysomnograms all command pay above the general hospital median. The National Board for Respiratory Care (NBRC) offers add-on credentials in these areas — Neonatal\u002FPediatric Specialist (NPS), Adult Critical Care Specialist (ACCS), and Sleep Disorders Specialist (SDS) — and respiratory therapists who hold them tend to earn toward the highest 10% of the BLS range.\r\n\r\nLead-therapist, supervisor, and clinical-coordinator roles also raise pay meaningfully, particularly in larger hospital systems. Some RTs move laterally into pulmonary function lab work, ECMO specialist roles, or transport teams (ground and rotor-wing critical-care transport), all of which tend to pay above the general floor rate. A bachelor's degree is not strictly required for most of these moves, but it is increasingly common among the therapists who hold them.\r\n\r\n## Where respiratory therapists earn the most\r\n\r\nRT wages vary widely from state to state, and even between metro areas within the same state. Two forces drive that: local cost of living and local demand for respiratory therapists. A median wage in a high-cost coastal metro can sit tens of thousands of dollars above the same role in a lower-cost rural area, and large hospital systems in the Northeast and on the West Coast tend to pay at the upper end of the national range.\r\n\r\nDemand also varies regionally. Areas with older populations, higher rates of smoking-related disease, or large tertiary hospital systems that operate busy ICUs and NICUs tend to keep RT positions open and bid wages up. Travel-RT contracts — short-term hospital assignments paid through staffing agencies — can pay well above the standard staff rate, but they are not reflected in the BLS median, which covers permanent employment only.\r\n\r\nBecause those figures are updated every year and differ for all 50 states, the most reliable source for a location-specific number is the BLS [Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F) program, which publishes median RT wages for every state and metropolitan area. Anyone weighing a respiratory therapy job offer should check the figure for their specific state and city rather than relying on the national median.\r\n\r\n## The job outlook for respiratory therapists\r\n\r\nPay is only half the picture; job security is the other. BLS projects employment of respiratory therapists to grow **12% from 2024 to 2034**, much faster than the average for all occupations, with about **8,800 openings every year** over the decade. The drivers are demographic and chronic: an aging population that brings a higher prevalence of pneumonia, COPD, and other conditions that restrict lung function, plus ongoing demand tied to smoking-related disease, air pollution, and respiratory emergencies. BLS also notes a growing emphasis on reducing hospital readmissions and shifting more pulmonary care into outpatient clinics and physician offices, which is expected to expand RT roles outside the traditional hospital walls. For a profession this specialized, that is an unusually strong outlook.\r\n\r\n## How respiratory therapists qualify\r\n\r\nRespiratory therapists typically reach the role through an **associate's degree** in respiratory therapy from a program accredited by the Commission on Accreditation for Respiratory Care (CoARC). Some employers prefer candidates with a bachelor's degree, and bachelor's-level programs are available for therapists who want to advance into supervisory or specialty roles.\r\n\r\nAfter completing an accredited program, graduates sit for the National Board for Respiratory Care (NBRC) exam to earn the **Certified Respiratory Therapist (CRT)** credential, then a second NBRC exam to earn **Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT)** status. Many hospitals now require RRT certification at hire or within a set window on the job, and most career advancement — specialty credentials, supervisory roles, ICU and NICU assignments — assumes the RRT as a baseline. Beyond the national credential, respiratory therapists must be **licensed in every state except Alaska**, with requirements set by each state board.\r\n\r\n## A note on your respiratory therapy credential\r\n\r\nA respiratory therapy credential is one many RTs want to display once they have earned it. If your original has been lost or damaged, your program or the NBRC can issue an official replacement for any formal purpose. For a framed copy to hang at home or in an office, DiplomaCraft also offers replica [credential certificates](https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Fcertificate) for display and novelty use.\r\n\r\n## Sources\r\n\r\n- Wage, employment, and outlook data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, *Occupational Outlook Handbook*, [Respiratory Therapists](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Fooh\u002Fhealthcare\u002Frespiratory-therapists.htm), reflecting the May 2024 Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics release (updated August 2025).\r\n- State and metro wage data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, [Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS)](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F).\r\n\r\nAll wage figures are medians and reflect the most recent BLS data available as of 2026. Actual pay varies by employer, location, experience, and specialty.","\u003Cp>Respiratory therapists (RTs) are a small but critical part of the American healthcare workforce — about 139,600 of them in 2024, running ventilators in ICUs and NICUs, treating asthma and COPD on the floors, and managing breathing emergencies in the ER. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), they earn well above the national median for all jobs, and demand for them is growing much faster than average.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>This guide breaks down what respiratory therapists actually earn in 2026 — the national median, how pay shifts with work setting and specialty, the credentials that move the number, and how location changes everything. All figures come from the most recent BLS data (the May 2024 release).\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>What the typical respiratory therapist earns\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>The median annual wage for respiratory therapists was \u003Cstrong>$80,450\u003C\u002Fstrong> in May 2024. \u003Cem>Median\u003C\u002Fem> means half of all RTs earned more than that figure and half earned less. For comparison, the median wage across all U.S. occupations was $49,500.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>The full range is wide:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>The lowest-paid 10% of respiratory therapists earned less than \u003Cstrong>$61,900\u003C\u002Fstrong>.\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003Cli>The highest-paid 10% earned more than \u003Cstrong>$108,820\u003C\u002Fstrong>.\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Ful>\n\u003Cp>That spread — roughly $62,000 to $109,000 — is the most important thing to understand about RT pay. &quot;Respiratory therapist salary&quot; is not a single number; it depends heavily on where a therapist works, how long they have been working, and which patients they specialize in treating.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Respiratory therapist pay by work setting\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Where a respiratory therapist works affects pay, though less dramatically than in some other healthcare occupations. BLS reports these median wages by employer type:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ctable>\n\u003Cthead>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Cth>Work setting\u003C\u002Fth>\n\u003Cth>Median RT pay (2024)\u003C\u002Fth>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003C\u002Fthead>\n\u003Ctbody>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Hospitals (state, local &amp; private)\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$80,660\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Nursing care facilities (skilled nursing)\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$75,910\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Offices of physicians\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$75,240\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003C\u002Ftbody>\n\u003C\u002Ftable>\n\u003Cp>Hospitals dominate this profession in a way that few healthcare roles match: about \u003Cstrong>80%\u003C\u002Fstrong> of all respiratory therapists work in a hospital, and the hospital median sits right at the national figure for the role. The remaining RTs are spread across skilled nursing facilities, physician offices, home health agencies, and outpatient clinics — all of which pay several thousand dollars below the hospital median. The gap between the top and bottom setting is only about $5,000 a year, which makes RT pay unusually tight by healthcare standards.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>That tight band is partly a function of where the work actually lives. Hospitals concentrate the ventilator patients, the NICU babies, and the after-hours codes that respiratory therapists are uniquely trained to handle, so the role's pay scale is effectively set inside that one sector. Nursing facility and physician-office work tends to involve more routine pulmonary testing, oxygen-therapy management, and patient teaching — important, but typically scheduled day shifts without the differential pay that hospital nights and weekends add on top of the base.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Experience and specialty\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>The other major factor is experience. New-graduate respiratory therapists typically start near the lower end of the range with the Certified Respiratory Therapist (CRT) credential. Therapists who advance to the Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT) credential — and add high-acuity experience — move toward the upper end.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Specialty matters as much as years on the job. Neonatal\u002Fpediatric specialists working in NICUs, adult critical care RTs running ventilators in the ICU, and sleep-disorder specialists administering polysomnograms all command pay above the general hospital median. The National Board for Respiratory Care (NBRC) offers add-on credentials in these areas — Neonatal\u002FPediatric Specialist (NPS), Adult Critical Care Specialist (ACCS), and Sleep Disorders Specialist (SDS) — and respiratory therapists who hold them tend to earn toward the highest 10% of the BLS range.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Lead-therapist, supervisor, and clinical-coordinator roles also raise pay meaningfully, particularly in larger hospital systems. Some RTs move laterally into pulmonary function lab work, ECMO specialist roles, or transport teams (ground and rotor-wing critical-care transport), all of which tend to pay above the general floor rate. A bachelor's degree is not strictly required for most of these moves, but it is increasingly common among the therapists who hold them.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Where respiratory therapists earn the most\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>RT wages vary widely from state to state, and even between metro areas within the same state. Two forces drive that: local cost of living and local demand for respiratory therapists. A median wage in a high-cost coastal metro can sit tens of thousands of dollars above the same role in a lower-cost rural area, and large hospital systems in the Northeast and on the West Coast tend to pay at the upper end of the national range.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Demand also varies regionally. Areas with older populations, higher rates of smoking-related disease, or large tertiary hospital systems that operate busy ICUs and NICUs tend to keep RT positions open and bid wages up. Travel-RT contracts — short-term hospital assignments paid through staffing agencies — can pay well above the standard staff rate, but they are not reflected in the BLS median, which covers permanent employment only.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Because those figures are updated every year and differ for all 50 states, the most reliable source for a location-specific number is the BLS \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F\">Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics\u003C\u002Fa> program, which publishes median RT wages for every state and metropolitan area. Anyone weighing a respiratory therapy job offer should check the figure for their specific state and city rather than relying on the national median.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>The job outlook for respiratory therapists\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Pay is only half the picture; job security is the other. BLS projects employment of respiratory therapists to grow \u003Cstrong>12% from 2024 to 2034\u003C\u002Fstrong>, much faster than the average for all occupations, with about \u003Cstrong>8,800 openings every year\u003C\u002Fstrong> over the decade. The drivers are demographic and chronic: an aging population that brings a higher prevalence of pneumonia, COPD, and other conditions that restrict lung function, plus ongoing demand tied to smoking-related disease, air pollution, and respiratory emergencies. BLS also notes a growing emphasis on reducing hospital readmissions and shifting more pulmonary care into outpatient clinics and physician offices, which is expected to expand RT roles outside the traditional hospital walls. For a profession this specialized, that is an unusually strong outlook.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>How respiratory therapists qualify\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Respiratory therapists typically reach the role through an \u003Cstrong>associate's degree\u003C\u002Fstrong> in respiratory therapy from a program accredited by the Commission on Accreditation for Respiratory Care (CoARC). Some employers prefer candidates with a bachelor's degree, and bachelor's-level programs are available for therapists who want to advance into supervisory or specialty roles.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>After completing an accredited program, graduates sit for the National Board for Respiratory Care (NBRC) exam to earn the \u003Cstrong>Certified Respiratory Therapist (CRT)\u003C\u002Fstrong> credential, then a second NBRC exam to earn \u003Cstrong>Registered Respiratory Therapist (RRT)\u003C\u002Fstrong> status. Many hospitals now require RRT certification at hire or within a set window on the job, and most career advancement — specialty credentials, supervisory roles, ICU and NICU assignments — assumes the RRT as a baseline. Beyond the national credential, respiratory therapists must be \u003Cstrong>licensed in every state except Alaska\u003C\u002Fstrong>, with requirements set by each state board.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>A note on your respiratory therapy credential\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>A respiratory therapy credential is one many RTs want to display once they have earned it. If your original has been lost or damaged, your program or the NBRC can issue an official replacement for any formal purpose. For a framed copy to hang at home or in an office, DiplomaCraft also offers replica \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Fcertificate\">credential certificates\u003C\u002Fa> for display and novelty use.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Sources\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>Wage, employment, and outlook data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, \u003Cem>Occupational Outlook Handbook\u003C\u002Fem>, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Fooh\u002Fhealthcare\u002Frespiratory-therapists.htm\">Respiratory Therapists\u003C\u002Fa>, reflecting the May 2024 Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics release (updated August 2025).\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003Cli>State and metro wage data: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Foes\u002F\">Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS)\u003C\u002Fa>.\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Ful>\n\u003Cp>All wage figures are medians and reflect the most recent BLS data available as of 2026. Actual pay varies by employer, location, experience, and specialty.\u003C\u002Fp>\n",{"title":62,"description":63},"Respiratory Therapist Salary in 2026: What Respiratory Therapists Earn | DiplomaCraft","Respiratory therapists earn a median of $80,450 a year (BLS, 2024). See how RT pay varies by setting, specialty, and where respiratory therapists earn the most.","2026-05-25T14:35:00+00:00",{"url":66,"thumb_url":67,"hero_url":68},"\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksjbcjs2ykhfq9zmazrfza5r\u002Frespiratory-therapist.jpg","\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksjbcjs2ykhfq9zmazrfza5r\u002Fconversions\u002Frespiratory-therapist-thumb.jpg","\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksjbcjs2ykhfq9zmazrfza5r\u002Fconversions\u002Frespiratory-therapist-hero.jpg",{"id":28,"name":29,"slug":30,"description":31,"meta":70,"sort_order":34},{"title":33,"description":33},{"id":72,"locale":10,"title":73,"slug":74,"excerpt":75,"content":76,"content_html":77,"meta":78,"author_label":19,"published_at":81,"reading_time_minutes":47,"view_count":82,"featured_image":83,"category":87},"01ksfrnvqp1jw8b082e4vp1b0m","Father's Day Gift Ideas for 2026: A Diploma He'll Actually Frame","fathers-day-gift-ideas","Skip the tie. This Father's Day, give Dad a gift he'll actually keep — a frame-worthy replica of the diploma he earned, or an honorary certificate made just for him.","# Father's Day Gift Ideas for 2026: A Diploma He'll Actually Frame\r\n\r\nEvery June, the same gifts go in the same gift bags — another tie, another mug, another set of grilling tools. They're kind, and they're forgotten by July. If you want to give your dad something he'll still have in ten years, it helps to think about what he actually keeps.\r\n\r\nMost dads keep very little. But the things they do keep tend to be tied to pride: a photo, a medal, a certificate. This Father's Day, that's the gift worth considering — something connected to an accomplishment he earned.\r\n\r\n## The idea: the diploma he earned, brought back to life\r\n\r\nThink about your dad's diploma. There's a good chance you've never seen it. It's in a box in the basement, faded in a frame in a back room, lost in a move two decades ago, or — very commonly — it was simply never framed at all. Plenty of men finished a degree, started a job the next week, and never did anything with the document.\r\n\r\nA replica diploma changes that. DiplomaCraft can reproduce the diploma he earned — his school, his degree, his graduation year — on heavyweight, archival-grade parchment, finished with a foil-printed metallic gold seal. Framed and handed over on Father's Day, it turns a forgotten piece of paper into something he'll hang on the wall.\r\n\r\nThis works for any level: a [college or university diploma](https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Fcollege-diploma), a high school diploma, or a graduate degree. If his original is genuinely lost or damaged, the same process produces a clean [replacement copy](https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Freplacement-diploma) for him to keep.\r\n\r\n## A few ways to give it\r\n\r\n**The degree he never framed.** The most straightforward version — recreate his actual diploma so it can finally go on a wall. For first-generation graduates, dads who studied at night while working, or anyone who \"meant to frame it someday,\" this lands harder than its price suggests.\r\n\r\n**The honorary \"World's Best Dad\" certificate.** Not every dad has a degree to reprint — and not every gift needs to be serious. A [custom certificate](https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Fcertificate) lets you award him a title he has genuinely earned: a Doctorate of Dadhood, a lifetime achievement in flat-tire rescues and burned pancakes. It is a gag gift, but on real parchment with a gold seal, it's the gag gift he actually frames. (If humor is the goal, the [funny diploma gift](https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Ffunny-diploma-gift) page has more in this vein.)\r\n\r\n**The office display piece.** For a dad who's proud of his profession, a sharp replica of his credential makes a natural [wall-display piece](https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fdiploma-for-wall-display) for a home office — the kind of thing he'd never buy for himself.\r\n\r\n## Why it works as a gift\r\n\r\nThree things make this more than a novelty.\r\n\r\n**It's built to last.** Every document is printed on heavyweight acid-free parchment — archival-grade stock that resists yellowing for decades — and the gold seal is foil-printed crisply onto the sheet, not a sticker or a peel-off decal. It looks and feels like a document meant to be kept.\r\n\r\n**It's personal.** You aren't buying something off a shelf; you're choosing his school, his wording, his year. A live preview shows every change as you type, so what you approve is exactly what arrives.\r\n\r\n**It gets a reaction.** A tie doesn't make anyone pause. A diploma he assumed was gone forever, or a certificate that says out loud what your family already knows about him — that gets the quiet, surprised look that makes a gift memorable.\r\n\r\n## Getting it there in time\r\n\r\nDesigning the document online takes about ten minutes. Physical orders print within one to two business days and then ship — free Standard shipping within the U.S., with faster Priority Mail and UPS options at checkout if you're closer to the deadline. (Here's [how it works](https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fhow-it-works), start to finish.)\r\n\r\nFather's Day 2026 falls on Sunday, June 21. To be safe with free Standard shipping, order by **June 12**; after that, the paid faster options keep you covered. There's also a digital version delivered instantly as a print-ready PDF — useful if you've left it late or want to handle framing yourself.\r\n\r\nThrough Father's Day, the code **DADGRAD15** takes 15% off any document.\r\n\r\n## One honest note\r\n\r\nDiplomaCraft documents are novelty replicas — made for display, keepsakes, props, and replacement copies. They are not official academic credentials and aren't a substitute for a record issued by a school or registrar. As a gift meant for a frame on the wall, though, that's exactly the point.\r\n\r\nIf this sounds like your dad, you can start on the [Father's Day gift page](https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Ffathers-day-gift) and have it designed before the end of the night.","\u003Ch1>Father's Day Gift Ideas for 2026: A Diploma He'll Actually Frame\u003C\u002Fh1>\n\u003Cp>Every June, the same gifts go in the same gift bags — another tie, another mug, another set of grilling tools. They're kind, and they're forgotten by July. If you want to give your dad something he'll still have in ten years, it helps to think about what he actually keeps.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Most dads keep very little. But the things they do keep tend to be tied to pride: a photo, a medal, a certificate. This Father's Day, that's the gift worth considering — something connected to an accomplishment he earned.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>The idea: the diploma he earned, brought back to life\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Think about your dad's diploma. There's a good chance you've never seen it. It's in a box in the basement, faded in a frame in a back room, lost in a move two decades ago, or — very commonly — it was simply never framed at all. Plenty of men finished a degree, started a job the next week, and never did anything with the document.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>A replica diploma changes that. DiplomaCraft can reproduce the diploma he earned — his school, his degree, his graduation year — on heavyweight, archival-grade parchment, finished with a foil-printed metallic gold seal. Framed and handed over on Father's Day, it turns a forgotten piece of paper into something he'll hang on the wall.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>This works for any level: a \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Fcollege-diploma\">college or university diploma\u003C\u002Fa>, a high school diploma, or a graduate degree. If his original is genuinely lost or damaged, the same process produces a clean \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Freplacement-diploma\">replacement copy\u003C\u002Fa> for him to keep.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>A few ways to give it\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cstrong>The degree he never framed.\u003C\u002Fstrong> The most straightforward version — recreate his actual diploma so it can finally go on a wall. For first-generation graduates, dads who studied at night while working, or anyone who &quot;meant to frame it someday,&quot; this lands harder than its price suggests.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cstrong>The honorary &quot;World's Best Dad&quot; certificate.\u003C\u002Fstrong> Not every dad has a degree to reprint — and not every gift needs to be serious. A \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Fcertificate\">custom certificate\u003C\u002Fa> lets you award him a title he has genuinely earned: a Doctorate of Dadhood, a lifetime achievement in flat-tire rescues and burned pancakes. It is a gag gift, but on real parchment with a gold seal, it's the gag gift he actually frames. (If humor is the goal, the \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Ffunny-diploma-gift\">funny diploma gift\u003C\u002Fa> page has more in this vein.)\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cstrong>The office display piece.\u003C\u002Fstrong> For a dad who's proud of his profession, a sharp replica of his credential makes a natural \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fdiploma-for-wall-display\">wall-display piece\u003C\u002Fa> for a home office — the kind of thing he'd never buy for himself.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Why it works as a gift\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Three things make this more than a novelty.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cstrong>It's built to last.\u003C\u002Fstrong> Every document is printed on heavyweight acid-free parchment — archival-grade stock that resists yellowing for decades — and the gold seal is foil-printed crisply onto the sheet, not a sticker or a peel-off decal. It looks and feels like a document meant to be kept.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cstrong>It's personal.\u003C\u002Fstrong> You aren't buying something off a shelf; you're choosing his school, his wording, his year. A live preview shows every change as you type, so what you approve is exactly what arrives.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cstrong>It gets a reaction.\u003C\u002Fstrong> A tie doesn't make anyone pause. A diploma he assumed was gone forever, or a certificate that says out loud what your family already knows about him — that gets the quiet, surprised look that makes a gift memorable.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Getting it there in time\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Designing the document online takes about ten minutes. Physical orders print within one to two business days and then ship — free Standard shipping within the U.S., with faster Priority Mail and UPS options at checkout if you're closer to the deadline. (Here's \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fhow-it-works\">how it works\u003C\u002Fa>, start to finish.)\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Father's Day 2026 falls on Sunday, June 21. To be safe with free Standard shipping, order by \u003Cstrong>June 12\u003C\u002Fstrong>; after that, the paid faster options keep you covered. There's also a digital version delivered instantly as a print-ready PDF — useful if you've left it late or want to handle framing yourself.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Through Father's Day, the code \u003Cstrong>DADGRAD15\u003C\u002Fstrong> takes 15% off any document.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>One honest note\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>DiplomaCraft documents are novelty replicas — made for display, keepsakes, props, and replacement copies. They are not official academic credentials and aren't a substitute for a record issued by a school or registrar. As a gift meant for a frame on the wall, though, that's exactly the point.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>If this sounds like your dad, you can start on the \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Ffathers-day-gift\">Father's Day gift page\u003C\u002Fa> and have it designed before the end of the night.\u003C\u002Fp>\n",{"title":79,"description":80},"Father's Day Gift Ideas: A Diploma He'll Frame | DiplomaCraft","Looking for a Father's Day gift Dad will keep? Reprint the diploma he earned on heavyweight parchment with a gold seal, or design a custom certificate.","2026-05-25T14:30:00+00:00",3,{"url":84,"thumb_url":85,"hero_url":86},"\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksfrvhdy72s2k572dmmrykxc\u002Ffathers-day-cover.jpg","\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksfrvhdy72s2k572dmmrykxc\u002Fconversions\u002Ffathers-day-cover-thumb.jpg","\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksfrvhdy72s2k572dmmrykxc\u002Fconversions\u002Ffathers-day-cover-hero.jpg",{"id":88,"name":89,"slug":90,"description":91,"meta":92,"sort_order":93},"01kjbmd4t6fzbevs5xawwvn8es","Others","others","Miscellaneous articles on education, documents, and related topics.",{"title":33,"description":33},99,{"id":95,"locale":10,"title":96,"slug":97,"excerpt":98,"content":99,"content_html":100,"meta":101,"author_label":19,"published_at":104,"reading_time_minutes":47,"view_count":47,"featured_image":105,"category":109},"01ksf17wxfs2f1yh4d7r2684kr","Does a Master's Degree Pay Off? What the 2026 Salary Data Shows","does-a-masters-degree-pay-off","Master's degree holders earn a median of about $95,700 a year, versus $80,200 for a bachelor's. Here's the real pay gap — and the caveats that headline number hides.","# Does a Master's Degree Pay Off? What the 2026 Salary Data Shows\r\n\r\nA master's degree takes one to three extra years and often tens of thousands of dollars in tuition. The obvious question: does it pay for itself? The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) tracks earnings by education level every year, and the data gives a clear — if incomplete — answer.\r\n\r\n## Earnings by education level\r\n\r\nThe table below shows median weekly earnings and unemployment rates for full-time workers age 25 and over, by the highest degree they hold (BLS, 2024). The annual figures are the weekly numbers multiplied by 52.\r\n\r\n| Highest degree | Median weekly earnings | Approx. annual | Unemployment rate |\r\n|---|---|---|---|\r\n| Professional degree | $2,363 | ~$122,900 | 1.3% |\r\n| Doctoral degree | $2,278 | ~$118,500 | 1.2% |\r\n| Master's degree | $1,840 | ~$95,700 | 2.2% |\r\n| Bachelor's degree | $1,543 | ~$80,200 | 2.5% |\r\n| Associate's degree | $1,099 | ~$57,100 | 2.8% |\r\n| Some college, no degree | $1,020 | ~$53,000 | 3.8% |\r\n| High school diploma | $930 | ~$48,400 | 4.2% |\r\n| Less than high school | $738 | ~$38,400 | 6.2% |\r\n\r\n## The master's premium\r\n\r\nOn these numbers, a worker whose highest credential is a master's degree earned a median of **$1,840 a week — about $95,700 a year**. A worker whose highest credential is a bachelor's degree earned **$1,543 a week, or about $80,200 a year**.\r\n\r\nThe difference — the \"master's premium\" — is roughly **$297 a week, or about $15,400 a year**. That is approximately 19% more than a bachelor's-degree holder earns. Master's holders also had a slightly lower unemployment rate: 2.2% versus 2.5%.\r\n\r\nOver a 30-year career, a steady $15,000-a-year gap adds up to well over $400,000 in additional gross earnings. On its face, that is a strong return.\r\n\r\n## Why the headline number can mislead\r\n\r\nThe premium is real, but three things complicate it — and they matter before anyone treats $15,400 a year as a guarantee.\r\n\r\n**1. The data shows attainment, not cause.** BLS measures what people with each degree earn, not what the degree itself adds. People who pursue master's degrees often differ from those who don't in field, ambition, and employer. Some of the \"premium\" reflects those differences, not the diploma.\r\n\r\n**2. The field matters far more than the level.** The $95,700 figure is an average across every master's field combined. A master's in engineering, computer science, business, or nursing often carries a large, measurable pay increase. A master's in many other fields carries little or none. Degree *level* alone does not predict the raise; the *field* does.\r\n\r\n**3. Cost and forgone earnings eat into the gain.** A master's typically means one to two years of tuition plus one to two years of reduced or zero income. If a program costs $40,000–$80,000 and delays full-time earnings, the ~$15,400 annual premium can take several years just to break even — longer if the degree was financed with debt.\r\n\r\n## When a master's tends to pay off\r\n\r\nA master's degree most reliably pays off in two situations.\r\n\r\nThe first is when it is a **requirement to enter the role at all**. Nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and many positions in counseling, physical therapy, library science, and social work cannot be done without the graduate credential. There, the question is not \"what is the premium\" but \"is this career worth the entry cost.\"\r\n\r\nThe second is in **fields with clear, documented graduate wage gains** — engineering, computer science, business, and several health specialties — especially when an employer offers tuition assistance, which removes the largest cost from the equation.\r\n\r\nIt is a closer call when a master's is *optional* in a field where the pay difference is small. In that case the BLS averages hide a lot, and the honest answer is to research the specific field rather than rely on the degree level.\r\n\r\n## A note on your diploma\r\n\r\nA graduate degree is an achievement many people want to display. If your original master's diploma has been lost or damaged, your university can issue an official replacement. For a framed copy to keep at home or in an office, DiplomaCraft also offers replica [master's degree diplomas](https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Funiversity-masters-degree-diploma) for display and novelty use.\r\n\r\n## Sources\r\n\r\n- Earnings and unemployment by education level: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, [*Education pays*](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Femp\u002Ftables\u002Funemployment-earnings-education.htm), Current Population Survey, 2024 — data for full-time wage and salary workers age 25 and over (updated August 2025).\r\n\r\nAnnual figures are weekly medians multiplied by 52 and are approximate. Actual earnings vary by field of study, occupation, location, and experience.","\u003Ch1>Does a Master's Degree Pay Off? What the 2026 Salary Data Shows\u003C\u002Fh1>\n\u003Cp>A master's degree takes one to three extra years and often tens of thousands of dollars in tuition. The obvious question: does it pay for itself? The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) tracks earnings by education level every year, and the data gives a clear — if incomplete — answer.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Earnings by education level\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>The table below shows median weekly earnings and unemployment rates for full-time workers age 25 and over, by the highest degree they hold (BLS, 2024). The annual figures are the weekly numbers multiplied by 52.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ctable>\n\u003Cthead>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Cth>Highest degree\u003C\u002Fth>\n\u003Cth>Median weekly earnings\u003C\u002Fth>\n\u003Cth>Approx. annual\u003C\u002Fth>\n\u003Cth>Unemployment rate\u003C\u002Fth>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003C\u002Fthead>\n\u003Ctbody>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Professional degree\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$2,363\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>~$122,900\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>1.3%\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Doctoral degree\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$2,278\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>~$118,500\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>1.2%\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Master's degree\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$1,840\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>~$95,700\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>2.2%\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Bachelor's degree\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$1,543\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>~$80,200\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>2.5%\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Associate's degree\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$1,099\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>~$57,100\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>2.8%\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Some college, no degree\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$1,020\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>~$53,000\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>3.8%\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>High school diploma\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$930\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>~$48,400\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>4.2%\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003Ctr>\n\u003Ctd>Less than high school\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>$738\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>~$38,400\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003Ctd>6.2%\u003C\u002Ftd>\n\u003C\u002Ftr>\n\u003C\u002Ftbody>\n\u003C\u002Ftable>\n\u003Ch2>The master's premium\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>On these numbers, a worker whose highest credential is a master's degree earned a median of \u003Cstrong>$1,840 a week — about $95,700 a year\u003C\u002Fstrong>. A worker whose highest credential is a bachelor's degree earned \u003Cstrong>$1,543 a week, or about $80,200 a year\u003C\u002Fstrong>.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>The difference — the &quot;master's premium&quot; — is roughly \u003Cstrong>$297 a week, or about $15,400 a year\u003C\u002Fstrong>. That is approximately 19% more than a bachelor's-degree holder earns. Master's holders also had a slightly lower unemployment rate: 2.2% versus 2.5%.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Over a 30-year career, a steady $15,000-a-year gap adds up to well over $400,000 in additional gross earnings. On its face, that is a strong return.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Why the headline number can mislead\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>The premium is real, but three things complicate it — and they matter before anyone treats $15,400 a year as a guarantee.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cstrong>1. The data shows attainment, not cause.\u003C\u002Fstrong> BLS measures what people with each degree earn, not what the degree itself adds. People who pursue master's degrees often differ from those who don't in field, ambition, and employer. Some of the &quot;premium&quot; reflects those differences, not the diploma.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cstrong>2. The field matters far more than the level.\u003C\u002Fstrong> The $95,700 figure is an average across every master's field combined. A master's in engineering, computer science, business, or nursing often carries a large, measurable pay increase. A master's in many other fields carries little or none. Degree \u003Cem>level\u003C\u002Fem> alone does not predict the raise; the \u003Cem>field\u003C\u002Fem> does.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cstrong>3. Cost and forgone earnings eat into the gain.\u003C\u002Fstrong> A master's typically means one to two years of tuition plus one to two years of reduced or zero income. If a program costs $40,000–$80,000 and delays full-time earnings, the ~$15,400 annual premium can take several years just to break even — longer if the degree was financed with debt.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>When a master's tends to pay off\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>A master's degree most reliably pays off in two situations.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>The first is when it is a \u003Cstrong>requirement to enter the role at all\u003C\u002Fstrong>. Nurse practitioners, physician assistants, and many positions in counseling, physical therapy, library science, and social work cannot be done without the graduate credential. There, the question is not &quot;what is the premium&quot; but &quot;is this career worth the entry cost.&quot;\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>The second is in \u003Cstrong>fields with clear, documented graduate wage gains\u003C\u002Fstrong> — engineering, computer science, business, and several health specialties — especially when an employer offers tuition assistance, which removes the largest cost from the equation.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>It is a closer call when a master's is \u003Cem>optional\u003C\u002Fem> in a field where the pay difference is small. In that case the BLS averages hide a lot, and the honest answer is to research the specific field rather than rely on the degree level.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>A note on your diploma\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>A graduate degree is an achievement many people want to display. If your original master's diploma has been lost or damaged, your university can issue an official replacement. For a framed copy to keep at home or in an office, DiplomaCraft also offers replica \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fdiplomacraft.com\u002Fproducts\u002Funiversity-masters-degree-diploma\">master's degree diplomas\u003C\u002Fa> for display and novelty use.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Sources\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>Earnings and unemployment by education level: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.bls.gov\u002Femp\u002Ftables\u002Funemployment-earnings-education.htm\">\u003Cem>Education pays\u003C\u002Fem>\u003C\u002Fa>, Current Population Survey, 2024 — data for full-time wage and salary workers age 25 and over (updated August 2025).\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Ful>\n\u003Cp>Annual figures are weekly medians multiplied by 52 and are approximate. Actual earnings vary by field of study, occupation, location, and experience.\u003C\u002Fp>\n",{"title":102,"description":103},"Does a Master's Degree Pay Off? 2026 Salary Data | DiplomaCraft","Master's holders earn a median ~$95,700 vs ~$80,200 for a bachelor's (BLS, 2024). See the real master's pay premium — and when the degree is worth it.","2026-05-25T07:40:26+00:00",{"url":106,"thumb_url":107,"hero_url":108},"\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksf17xm93xgthxded84tn98c\u002F01ksf17wxfs2f1yh4d7r2684kr-wo2iHDWA.jpg","\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksf17xm93xgthxded84tn98c\u002Fconversions\u002F01ksf17wxfs2f1yh4d7r2684kr-wo2iHDWA-thumb.jpg","\u002Fmedia\u002F01ksf17xm93xgthxded84tn98c\u002Fconversions\u002F01ksf17wxfs2f1yh4d7r2684kr-wo2iHDWA-hero.jpg",{"id":28,"name":29,"slug":30,"description":31,"meta":110,"sort_order":34},{"title":33,"description":33}]