TradesPays

In 2026, plumbers in Arizona earn a median of $62,070 per year ($29.84/hr), according to BLS OEWS (May 2025). Pay rises with experience, license tier, and specialty. Last updated June 2026.

How much do plumbers make in Arizona in 2026?

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

$62,070/yr

Median (50th percentile)

Half of Arizona plumbers earn between $49,590 and $79,610 per year.

Where this number sits on the path

  1. Years 1–2

    Apprentice / Helper

    helper / trainee pay

  2. Years 3–5+

    Journeyman

    $62,070/yr · this page

  3. Years 7+

    Foreman / Lead

    premium over journeyman

$49,590/yr$62,070/yr$79,610/yr

Source: BLS OEWS May 2025

Highest-paying state
Illinois · $99,950
Workers in Arizona
11,810 (BLS 2025)
Pay range (p25–p75)
$49,590–$79,610

What do non-union plumbers earn in Arizona?

Non-union Plumber in Arizona

$62,070/yr

25th–75th: $49,590/yr–$79,610/yr

$80,691/yr total compbase + ~30% benefits (est., BLS ECEC)

Plumber is predominantly non-union in Arizona. Pay varies based on employer, region within the state, and experience. BLS figures cover all plumbers. Submit your salary →

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Plumber pay in Arizona

The median plumber salary in Arizona is $62,070 a year, or $29.84 an hour based on a 2,080-hour work year. That number comes from BLS OEWS May 2025 data and reflects what a plumber in the middle of the pay range takes home before overtime or benefits.

The bottom quarter of Arizona plumbers — those just starting out or working in lower-paying corners of the state — earn up to $49,590 a year, which works out to about $23.84 an hour. If you are new to the trade or fresh off your apprenticeship, this is a realistic starting point to benchmark against.

Experienced plumbers and those working in higher-demand specialties sit at the 75th percentile, pulling in $79,610 a year, or roughly $38.27 an hour. Reaching that level typically means several years in the field, a journeyman or master license, and consistent work on commercial or industrial jobs rather than residential service calls alone.

Arizona's plumbing market is driven heavily by construction activity in the Phoenix metro and Tucson areas. Population growth in the Valley has kept demand for rough-in plumbing work steady, while the state's aging housing stock in older neighborhoods generates a reliable stream of service and remodel work. Neither trend is guaranteed to hold, but both have supported wages in recent years.

Your take-home pay as a plumber in Arizona depends on a few concrete factors: your license level, whether you work for a large mechanical contractor or a small residential shop, and how much overtime you log. Master plumbers and those who move into foreman or estimating roles regularly push past the 75th percentile figure. Plumbers who add certifications in gas line work, medical gas, or backflow prevention also tend to see a bump.

No union scale data is currently available for plumbers in Arizona through TradesPays. If you work under a collective bargaining agreement, your scale wages and fringe benefits may differ significantly from the BLS figures shown here. Check with your local union hall for the most current rate sheet.

Use the numbers on this page as a baseline when you are negotiating a new job offer, deciding whether to take on overtime, or figuring out whether your current shop is paying you what the market supports. A $12,020 gap separates the median from the 75th percentile — that difference is real money, and knowing it exists is the first step to closing it.

Recent submissions

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Be the first plumber in Arizona to share your pay. We start with the BLS — workers like you fill in the rest.

How Arizona compares

Plumber median by state

Other trades in Arizona

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.

Plumber pay in Arizona: FAQ

What is the median plumber salary in Arizona?
The median plumber salary in Arizona is $62,070 per year, or about $29.84 per hour. This figure comes from BLS OEWS May 2025 data.
How much do entry-level plumbers make in Arizona?
Plumbers at the 25th percentile in Arizona earn $49,590 a year, which is roughly $23.84 an hour. This is a useful benchmark for those new to the trade or early in their apprenticeship.
What do the top-earning plumbers make in Arizona?
Plumbers at the 75th percentile in Arizona earn $79,610 per year, or about $38.27 per hour. These are typically experienced journeymen, master plumbers, or those working in higher-paying commercial and industrial sectors.
Is union pay data available for plumbers in Arizona?
No union scale data is currently available for plumbers in Arizona on TradesPays. If you work under a collective bargaining agreement, contact your local union hall for the current wage and fringe benefit rates.
What factors affect a plumber's pay in Arizona?
License level (journeyman vs. master), employer size, type of work (residential, commercial, or industrial), overtime hours, and specialty certifications such as gas line or backflow prevention all influence where a plumber falls in the pay range.
Where does TradesPays get its Arizona plumber salary data?
All salary figures on this page come from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey, May 2025 release.

Sources

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