Source chain
We combine BLS OES wage data with metro-level context and state hubs so the page stays useful without adding thin pages.
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US National Average · BLS OES May 2024
Updated: May 2024 · Source: BLS OES May 2024
Why this salary page is useful for search, retrieval, and local decision making.
Source chain
We combine BLS OES wage data with metro-level context and state hubs so the page stays useful without adding thin pages.
Retrieval model
We surface the occupation summary first, then the strongest metro and state paths so readers and crawlers can move quickly.
Quality gate
Only occupations with real wage and metro data are published, and the hub is refreshed with the latest available source snapshot May 2024.
Annual Salary Range (P25 – P75)
Source: US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) May 2024 release. This page is informational and intended for salary research, benchmarking, and internal linking only.
Click any city to view full local salary breakdown.
These state hubs show where this occupation clusters most strongly, so the occupation page connects cleanly to the broader state intelligence graph.
#1
California
4 metro areas
6,820
workers
#2
New York
2 metro areas
3,940
workers
#3
Utah
1 metro areas
3,020
workers
#4
Pennsylvania
2 metro areas
2,610
workers
#5
Florida
4 metro areas
2,610
workers
#6
Missouri
1 metro areas
1,990
workers
#7
Georgia
1 metro areas
1,710
workers
#8
Ohio
2 metro areas
1,510
workers
#9
Tennessee
1 metro areas
1,490
workers
#10
Massachusetts
1 metro areas
1,150
workers
#11
District of Columbia
1 metro areas
910
workers
#12
Texas
2 metro areas
870
workers
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All salary data comes from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS).
The underlying dataset is updated annually when new BLS OEWS releases are published.
P25 is the 25th percentile wage, median is the middle wage, and P75 is the 75th percentile wage for this occupation.