They both work with electricity, they're both IBEW trades, and people constantly mix them up — but an electrician and a lineman do very different jobs. If you're deciding between the two, here's the honest breakdown of the work, the pay, and which might fit you better.
A lineman works outside on the power grid — poles, high-voltage lines, transformers — getting electricity to your building. An electrician works mostly inside, wiring and maintaining the electrical systems within buildings. Lineman is higher voltage and more weather/height exposure; electrician is more varied indoor work with better work-life balance.
Linemen build and maintain the electrical distribution and transmission grid — the system that carries power from generating stations to your meter. They work outdoors, at height on poles or in bucket trucks, on energized high-voltage lines.
It's physically demanding, weather-exposed, and carries serious hazard pay potential through overtime and storm work. See our full guide to becoming a lineman.
Electricians install, maintain, and repair the electrical systems inside buildings and facilities — everything past the meter. There are a few flavors: residential (homes), commercial (offices, stores), and industrial (factories, plants).
Booming demand right now from EV chargers, solar, battery storage, and data centers. More predictable hours and a clearer path to running your own business than lineman work.
| Factor | Lineman | Electrician |
|---|---|---|
| Where you work | Outdoors, on the grid | Mostly indoors, in buildings |
| Voltage | High (4kV–765kV) | Lower (120V–480V) |
| Heights | Frequent (poles, towers) | Occasional (ladders, lifts) |
| Typical pay | $68k–$145k+ | $50k–$110k+ |
| Overtime/storm pay | High potential | Moderate |
| Work-life balance | On-call, storm travel | More predictable |
| Own business path | Limited | Strong |
| Apprenticeship | 4–5 years (IBEW outside) | 4–5 years (IBEW inside / IEC) |
On average, linemen earn more per hour and have bigger overtime upside, especially with storm work that can add $30k–$60k in a good year. But electricians have something linemen mostly don't: a clear path to starting their own contracting business, where income can exceed what most linemen make.
So the honest answer: lineman pays more as an employee; electrician has a higher ceiling if you want to own a business. Both comfortably clear six figures for motivated people in good markets.
Our pay map shows lineman and electrician rates side by side for all 50 states, with top employers and apprenticeships.
View Pay Map →Choose lineman if: you like working outdoors, don't mind heights and weather, want top employee pay and big overtime, and are okay with being on-call and traveling for storms.
Choose electrician if: you prefer indoor work and more predictable hours, like detailed problem-solving and blueprint work, want a clearer path to owning a business, and prefer lower-voltage, more controlled conditions.
Both are excellent, secure, well-paid careers entered through paid apprenticeships. Neither is "better" — they fit different people.
Linemen typically earn more per hour and have larger overtime and storm-pay potential, often $68k–$145k+. Electricians earn $50k–$110k+ as employees but have a stronger path to business ownership, where the income ceiling is higher. Both can clear six figures.
No. Linemen work outdoors on the high-voltage power grid getting electricity to buildings. Electricians work mostly indoors on the lower-voltage systems within buildings. They're separate trades with separate apprenticeships, even though both are often IBEW.
Lineman apprenticeships are often more competitive with fewer slots and a physical screening, since the work is more specialized and hazardous. Electrician apprenticeships are more numerous and somewhat easier to enter, though still competitive in strong markets.
It's possible but not automatic — they're different apprenticeships and skill sets. Some electrical knowledge transfers, but switching generally means entering the other trade's apprenticeship track rather than a direct lateral move.
About this guide: Written by a working journeyman lineman — IBEW, Class A CDL. Pay ranges reflect current union and BLS data and vary by state and experience. Corrections welcome.
Salary is only half the picture. Our free Wealth Calculator compares lifetime earnings, student debt, investment growth, and net worth — trade vs degree, side by side. See exactly who comes out ahead, and when.
Run the Wealth Calculator → Compare Electrician vs a degree