Electrical linemen are among the highest-paid tradespeople in the US, maintaining and repairing the power grid that keeps the country running. Here is the complete salary picture for 2026.

Lineman Salary Overview

By Experience Level

Level Hourly Annual
Groundman / Pre-Apprentice $20–$27 $42,000–$56,000
Apprentice Lineman (Year 1–2) $24–$33 $50,000–$69,000
Apprentice Lineman (Year 3–4) $31–$44 $64,000–$91,000
Journeyman Lineman $40–$60 $83,000–$125,000
Foreman $48–$72 $100,000–$150,000
General Foreman / Superintendent $58–$88 $121,000–$183,000

Median Annual Salary (BLS 2025 Data)

  • Electrical power-line installers and repairers: $94,500
  • Top 10%: $132,000+
  • Bottom 10%: $54,000

Lineman is consistently among the top 5 highest-paid trades in the US.


Lineman Salary by State

State Average Annual Salary
Alaska $135,000
California $128,000
New York $122,000
Hawaii $118,000
New Jersey $115,000
Oregon $112,000
Washington $110,000
Illinois $108,000
Massachusetts $106,000
Colorado $102,000
Texas $93,000
Georgia $85,000
Florida $82,000
Tennessee $78,000
Mississippi $70,000

Alaska pays the most due to extreme conditions, remoteness, and a small labor pool. Even in lower-wage states, lineman pay remains well above median US wages.


Lineman Types and Pay Ranges

Type Description Annual Salary Range
Distribution Lineman Maintains local power lines (residential/commercial) $80,000–$115,000
Transmission Lineman High-voltage transmission lines (115kV–765kV) $88,000–$130,000
Substation Technician Substations and switching equipment $85,000–$125,000
Underground Cable Lineman Buried cable installation and repair $82,000–$118,000
Telecommunications Lineman Cable, fiber, and phone line work $55,000–$80,000
Tree Trimmer / Line Clearance Utility tree work for line clearance $55,000–$90,000

Transmission linemen work on the highest voltages and typically earn the most. Telecom linemen are paid substantially less than power linemen.


Union vs. Non-Union Linemen

The IBEW (International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers) is the dominant union for linemen:

Factor Union (IBEW) Non-Union (Contract/Co-op)
Journeyman base wage $48–$72/hr $36–$55/hr
Benefits package $18–$28/hr equivalent Varies
Total compensation $66–$100/hr $38–$65/hr
Pension (defined benefit) Standard IBEW benefit Often 401k only
Apprenticeship IBEW JATC (4 years) Utility/co-op sponsored

IBEW journeymen in California and New York receive total hourly packages (wages + benefits) worth $85–$110/hr — making them among the highest-compensated workers in any trade.


Storm Restoration Pay — A Major Income Multiplier

Storm restoration is a massive income opportunity for linemen:

Storm Type Duration Day Rate (Journeyman)
Minor storm (local) 1–3 days $800–$1,000/day
Regional storm (100k+ outages) 3–14 days $850–$1,100/day
Major hurricane (Cat 3+) 2–6 weeks $900–$1,200/day

A lineman who travels for 3 major hurricane storms per year can add $15,000–$45,000 to annual income. Some contractors specialize in storm work and earn $150,000–$200,000+/yr but travel year-round.


Lineman Career Path

Groundman / Pre-Apprentice (1 year typical)
    ↓
IBEW JATC Apprentice (4 years)
    ↓
Journeyman Lineman
    ↓
Foreman
    ↓
General Foreman / Jobs Superintendent
    ↓
Contractor / Owner (private line contractors)

IBEW apprenticeship is the gold standard pathway. Pre-apprentice groundman work is typically required before entering a JATC program. Rural electric cooperatives also run their own apprenticeship programs.


How to Increase Your Earnings as a Lineman

Strategy Estimated Income Boost
Progress from distribution to transmission +$8,000–$15,000/yr
Become a foreman +$15,000–$35,000/yr
Sign up for storm restoration travel +$15,000–$45,000/yr
Join a high-wage IBEW local +$10,000–$30,000/yr
Move to a high-paying state +$10,000–$40,000/yr
Move to contractor / crew owner +$30,000–$100,000/yr
Get substation / relay tech training +$10,000–$20,000/yr

Job Outlook for Linemen

The BLS projects 11% job growth for electrical power-line installers through 2032 — much faster than average. Demand drivers:

  • Grid modernization: Aging transmission and distribution infrastructure requires massive investment
  • Renewable energy: Solar and wind farms require transmission line buildout
  • EV charging infrastructure: Distribution grid upgrades for load increase
  • Storm hardening: Utilities investing in underground conversion and stronger overhead systems
  • Retirement wave: Large share of current linemen within 5–10 years of retirement

The lineman trade has one of the strongest job security profiles of any skilled trade, with demand from utilities, contractors, and cooperatives that cannot be offshored or easily automated.


Lineman Income: Sample Monthly Budgets

Apprentice Lineman (Year 2) — $62,000/yr (Texas, single)

Category Monthly
Take-home pay (est.) $4,200
Housing (rent) $1,100
Transportation (truck) $600
Food & groceries $500
Utilities $150
Union dues $80
401(k) contribution $250
Remaining $1,520

Journeyman Lineman — $110,000/yr (Oregon, single)

Category Monthly
Take-home pay (est.) $6,900
Housing $1,600
Transportation $700
Food & groceries $600
Utilities $200
Union dues $100
401(k) max contribution $1,950
Remaining $1,750

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I become a lineman? Most entry points start as a groundman working for a utility or electrical contractor for 1–2 years, then applying to an IBEW Joint Apprenticeship Training Committee (JATC) program. Apprenticeship runs 4 years with increasing wage steps (starting around 60% of journeyman rate and progressing to 95%). A commercial driver’s license (CDL) is often required.

Is lineman work dangerous? Yes — lineman is consistently ranked among the most dangerous occupations in the US. Electrical hazards, working at height (40–100+ feet), and outdoor conditions during storms create significant risk. Proper lockout/tagout procedures and PPE requirements exist for a reason. The danger is factored into the high wage.

What is the difference between a wireman and a lineman? wiremen (inside electricians) work on building electrical systems. Linemen work on the electrical distribution and transmission grid — the poles, towers, and substations. Both are IBEW unions but different locals. Linemen generally earn more.

Do linemen travel a lot? It depends on whether you work for a utility (typically local, regular schedule with overtime during outages) or a contractor (often regional or national travel). Storm restoration causes all linemen to potentially travel and work extended hours. Contractor linemen can spend 200+ days/year away from home for higher pay.