Carpenter Pay · Rhode Island
Carpenter Salary in Rhode Island (2026)
Real pay by career stage, where the work is, and how to start — researched and maintained by a working tradesman. Updated 2026.
Carpenters build the structure everything else hangs on — framing, forms, finish, and layout — and it's one of the few trades with a clear, debt-free path from apprentice to six figures on the high end. Rhode Island carpenters earn solid money that climbs with experience, journeyman status, and moving into foreman and specialty work. Here's the real pay, where the jobs are, and how to get started in Rhode Island.
Rhode Island Carpenter Pay Range
$40-90k
⏱ OT + foreman pay push the top end higher
Local market: Union scale and large commercial jobs in the metros pay highest; smaller residential and rural work pays less.
Pay by Career Stage in Rhode Island
Here's how carpenter pay progresses in Rhode Island — from apprentice to journeyman to foreman. In a registered apprenticeship you get a raise every six months, so your pay climbs the whole way through.
Apprentice (start)$19/hr
Journeyman$34-42/hr
Foreman$49/hr
Before You Decide
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Where Carpenters Work in Rhode Island
Carpenters in Rhode Island work across three main lanes — union signatory contractors, ABC merit-shop (open-shop) builders, and large commercial GCs plus industrial and millwright crews. The best-paying seats are on big commercial and union jobs in the metros. The fastest way into real openings is through an apprenticeship, which places you with a contractor while you train. We're adding named Rhode Island employers to this page over time.
Union signatory contractorsvia New England Regional Council
ABC merit-shop contractorsopen-shop (non-union) path
Commercial GCs & industrial / millwright crewslargest employers of carpenters
Carpentry Schools & Apprenticeships in Rhode Island
You can break into carpentry through a paid union or merit-shop apprenticeship, or through a technical-college carpentry program. Look for the ones with real shop time and employer connections — and remember the apprenticeship route pays you from day one.
How to Become a Carpenter in Rhode Island
The path is affordable and debt-free: finish high school or earn a GED, then get into a registered carpenters' apprenticeship (about 4 years, paid) or start with a technical-college carpentry certificate. You earn journeyman status, then push toward foreman, general foreman, and specialty work — concrete formwork, interior systems, or millwright — which move you to the top of the Rhode Island pay scale. Stack OSHA-10/30 and specialty certifications as you go.
For the full step-by-step — tools, apprenticeship application, and what the work is really like — read our full guide to becoming a carpenter.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How much do carpenters make in Rhode Island?
In Rhode Island, carpenter pay ranges roughly $40-90k depending on experience and whether the work is union or open-shop. Apprentices start lower and earn raises every six months, journeyman carpenters earn the middle, and foremen and specialty carpenters earn the most. Overtime and per diem push the top end higher.
How long does it take to become a carpenter in Rhode Island?
A registered carpenters' apprenticeship in Rhode Island runs about 4 years, and you earn a paycheck the entire time — there's no tuition debt. A technical-college carpentry certificate is faster (often under a year) and can get you onto a crew sooner.
Do you need a license to be a carpenter in Rhode Island?
Carpentry generally doesn't require a state occupational license the way electrical or plumbing does. What raises your pay is completing a registered apprenticeship (journeyman status), OSHA-10/30 safety cards, and specialty skills. If you go out on your own as a contractor, Rhode Island may require a general-contractor or business license.
Where do carpenters work in Rhode Island?
Commercial general contractors, union signatory contractors, merit-shop builders, residential and remodeling companies, and concrete, formwork, and industrial/millwright crews all hire carpenters in Rhode Island. Union and large commercial jobs in the metros tend to pay the most.