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In 2026, cement masons in Washington earn a median of $77,520 per year ($37.27/hr), according to BLS OEWS (May 2025). Pay rises with experience, license tier, and specialty. Last updated June 2026.

How much do cement masons make in Washington in 2026?

Real pay data from real trades workers. Source: BLS OEWS May 2025 · Updated June 2026.

$77,520/yr

Median (50th percentile)

Half of Washington cement masons earn between $58,880 and $98,280 per year.

Where this number sits on the path

  1. Years 1–2

    Apprentice / Helper

    helper / trainee pay

  2. Years 3–5+

    Journeyman

    $77,520/yr · this page

  3. Years 7+

    Foreman / Lead

    premium over journeyman

$58,880/yr$77,520/yr$98,280/yr

Source: BLS OEWS May 2025

Highest-paying state
Illinois · $78,170
Workers in Washington
4,440 (BLS 2025)
Pay range (p25–p75)
$58,880–$98,280

What do non-union cement masons earn in Washington?

Non-union Cement Mason in Washington

$77,520/yr

25th–75th: $58,880/yr–$98,280/yr

$100,776/yr total compbase + ~30% benefits (est., BLS ECEC)

Cement Mason is predominantly non-union in Washington. Pay varies based on employer, region within the state, and experience. BLS figures cover all cement masons. Submit your salary →

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Cement Mason pay in Washington

The median cement mason in Washington earns $77,520 a year, which works out to about $37.27 an hour based on a standard 2,080-hour work year. That's a solid middle-ground figure, but the real story is how wide the range runs — from $58,880 at the 25th percentile all the way up to $98,280 at the 75th percentile. That's a spread of nearly $40,000 between a mason just finding their footing and one with serious experience and a track record of quality work.

Entry-level and lower-experience cement masons in Washington cluster near the 25th percentile at $58,880, or roughly $28.31 an hour. That's still a respectable wage, but workers at this level are typically newer to the trade, handling flatwork and basic slab pours rather than decorative or specialty concrete. Expect to spend time here while building speed, reading plans accurately, and getting comfortable with the full finishing sequence — screeding, floating, troweling, and edging to spec.

Workers in the middle of the pay range — the $77,520 median — have usually put in several years on the tools. They can run a finishing crew, handle challenging pours in variable weather, and manage typical concrete placement timelines without constant supervision. At $37.27 an hour, this is where most journeyman-level masons in Washington land, and it reflects a trade where hands-on skill directly drives what an employer will pay.

The 75th percentile at $98,280 — about $47.25 an hour — belongs to the most experienced and versatile masons. Workers at this level often specialize in high-tolerance industrial floors, decorative concrete, or large commercial and infrastructure projects. They may also take on lead or foreman responsibilities, coordinating crews and ensuring flatness tolerances and surface finishes meet contract specs. In a state with a heavy volume of commercial construction, data centers, and infrastructure work, demand for this level of skill keeps top-end wages strong.

Washington's construction activity is concentrated heavily in the Puget Sound corridor — Seattle, Bellevue, Tacoma, and the surrounding King and Pierce County markets. Cement masons working in these metro areas typically earn toward the upper end of the range due to higher project complexity, tighter schedules, and a higher general cost of doing business. Eastern Washington markets like Spokane and the Tri-Cities tend to run somewhat lower, though agricultural and industrial construction in those regions still provides steady work.

It's worth noting that overtime is common in this trade. Concrete doesn't always cooperate with a 40-hour week — pours can run long, early morning starts are frequent, and deadline pressure on commercial jobs often means extra hours. For a mason at the median rate of $37.27, a consistent 10 hours of overtime per week adds roughly $29,000 to annual take-home pay, before taxes, pushing total compensation well past $100,000 in a busy year.

The data on this page comes from the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) program, May 2025. No union scale data was available for cement masons in Washington at the time of publication, but workers on public works and prevailing wage jobs in Washington are protected by the state's Prevailing Wage Act, which sets minimum rates by trade and county. Those rates are published separately by the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries and may be higher than the BLS figures shown here, particularly for public infrastructure and government-contracted work.

If you're weighing whether to enter this trade, the numbers tell a clear story: a cement mason at the Washington median out-earns a large portion of workers who went to four-year colleges, without the student debt. The work is physical and demands precision, but the pay reflects that. For experienced masons at the 75th percentile, $98,280 a year — and often more with overtime — is the reward for mastering a craft that every building, road, and structure depends on.

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How Washington compares

Cement Mason median by state

Other trades in Washington

Median pay by trade

About this data

Wages come from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS program (May 2025), the authoritative public source for occupational pay. Union figures are journeyman scales from IBEW/UA locals (approximate). Member submissions — added anonymously, never with a raw email address — refine these numbers over time.

Cement Mason pay in Washington: FAQ

What is the median cement mason salary in Washington?
The median cement mason in Washington earns $77,520 a year, or about $37.27 an hour, according to BLS OEWS May 2025 data.
What do entry-level cement masons earn in Washington?
At the 25th percentile, cement masons in Washington earn $58,880 a year — roughly $28.31 an hour. This typically reflects workers newer to the trade or those working on less complex projects.
What can an experienced cement mason earn in Washington?
Cement masons at the 75th percentile in Washington earn $98,280 a year, which is about $47.25 an hour. Top earners with overtime can push total annual pay well above $100,000.
Is union scale available for cement masons in Washington?
No union scale data was available for this trade and state at time of publication. However, cement masons on public works projects in Washington may earn higher rates under the state's Prevailing Wage Act — check the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries for county-specific prevailing wage rates.
Where do cement masons earn the most in Washington?
Masons working in the Puget Sound metro area — Seattle, Bellevue, and Tacoma — tend to earn toward the higher end of the pay range due to greater project complexity and higher construction volume compared to Eastern Washington markets.
How does overtime affect a cement mason's total pay in Washington?
Overtime is common in this trade. A mason at the median rate of $37.27 an hour who works a consistent 10 hours of overtime per week can add roughly $29,000 to their annual earnings, potentially pushing total pay past $100,000 in a busy year.

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