Aircraft Mechanic Pay by State

Aircraft Mechanic Salary in Minnesota (2026)

Real A&P pay, Part 147 schools, and how to start — from US Trade Route, built by a working tradesman. Updated July 2026.

MSP is a Delta fortress hub, and Delta's Minneapolis maintenance base is one of the anchor A&P employers in the upper Midwest — union representation, license premiums, and shift differentials included. Endeavor Air and Sun Country are headquartered here too, so the regional and leisure fleets add a second and third door into the trade.

Minnesota Aircraft Mechanic Pay Range

$55-108k
⚙ Delta MSP base & OT push higher

The A&P Pay Ladder

Aircraft mechanic pay climbs with your certificate and your seat. New A&Ps start on the line or in the hangar; experienced mechanics add type experience and shift premiums; the top of the ladder is lead positions and the Inspection Authorization (IA) — and at airlines and cargo carriers, license premiums and union scale stack on top of all of it.

New A&P Mechanic$55k
Experienced A&P$82k
Lead / Inspector (IA)$110k+
Before You Decide
Is A&P School Worth It vs College?

See how a Minnesota aircraft mechanic career stacks up against a four-year degree — lifetime earnings, debt, and net worth, side by side.

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Who Hires Aircraft Mechanics in Minnesota

Airlines, MRO shops, cargo carriers, manufacturers, and business-aviation service centers are where A&Ps work — and in Minnesota, these are the names mechanics know, based on reviews from mechanics in the field.

Delta Air Lines (MSP maintenance base)★ 4.2 (14 reviews)
Endeavor Air (MSP HQ)★ 4.0 (9 reviews)
Sun Country Airlines (MSP HQ)★ 3.9 (11 reviews)

A&P Schools & Training in Minnesota

The standard route is an FAA Part 147 school — 12-24 months, roughly 1,900 curriculum hours, typically $20-50k (community-college programs run far less). Most Part 147 schools accept the GI Bill. Rosters change — always confirm a school's current programs directly.

Northland Community & Technical CollegeAerospace / Aviation Maintenance (Part 147) — Thief River Falls
Lake Superior CollegeAviation Maintenance Technology — Duluth

How to Become an Aircraft Mechanic in Minnesota

The path is federal, applied locally: graduate an FAA Part 147 program (or document 30 months of hands-on experience — the route most military mechanics use), then pass the FAA written, oral, and practical exams for the Airframe and Powerplant ratings. That A&P certificate is a federal license good in all 50 states — no four-year degree at any step.

For the complete step-by-step — costs, the experience route, and what the exams cover — read our full guide to becoming an aircraft mechanic. Thinking about the cockpit instead? See the pilot guide.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much do aircraft mechanics make in Minnesota?
Aircraft mechanics in Minnesota earn roughly $55-108k depending on employer and experience. New A&Ps start around $55k, experienced mechanics reach $82k, and lead mechanics or inspectors (IA) at airlines and cargo carriers clear $110k+ with license premiums and shift differentials. Delta MSP base & OT push higher.
How long does it take to become an aircraft mechanic in Minnesota?
The standard route is an FAA Part 147 school — 12-24 months and roughly 1,900 curriculum hours — then the FAA written, oral, and practical exams for the Airframe and Powerplant ratings. The alternative is documenting 30 months of hands-on experience, the path most military mechanics use.
Do you need a degree to be an aircraft mechanic in Minnesota?
No. The A&P is a federal certificate, not a degree — you qualify through a Part 147 school (typically $20-50k, far less at community colleges) or documented experience, then pass the FAA exams. Most Part 147 schools accept the GI Bill.
Where do Minnesota aircraft mechanics train and work?
A&P and aviation maintenance programs in Minnesota include Northland Community & Technical College and Lake Superior College. Hiring nearby: Delta Air Lines (MSP maintenance base), Endeavor Air (MSP HQ), Sun Country Airlines (MSP HQ).