300 feet up, no room for a bad day.
Wind turbine technician is consistently ranked among the fastest-growing, highest-paying trades in America — and it's not close. This guide breaks down real pay by experience level and what actually moves the number.
Wind Technician
The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics tracks this trade under "wind turbine technicians" — that category posted a median annual wage of $62,580 as of May 2024, the most recent OEWS data available. The BLS also projects employment growth of 50% from 2024 to 2034 — one of the two fastest-growing occupations in the entire U.S. economy.
Entry level ($22–28/hr) is where most people start in this trade — typically through a formal apprenticeship, trade school program, or on-the-job training under a journeyman.
Journeyman ($32–42/hr) is where independent, unsupervised work authority kicks in — the point where most of the trade's workforce sits.
Master / top end ($44–58+/hr) covers senior specialists and crew leads — the people called in when the job is too complex or too urgent for anyone else.
Offshore wind assignments involve more complex logistics and safety requirements — and pay accordingly.
Technicians willing to travel between project sites often earn per diem and bonuses on top of base wage.
Turbine manufacturers' own service crews and large utilities tend to pay more than small local contractors.
Peak maintenance windows and new-turbine commissioning create heavy overtime opportunity.
“You climb into the nacelle, run diagnostics on a machine bigger than most houses, and the view isn't bad either.”
— A day in the life, Wind Technician
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Jobs In WindTechnician is one of 13 trade-specific sites in the Careers In Trades network.