If you like running powerful machines and working on big projects, heavy equipment operation is one of the more enjoyable high-paying trades. Crane certification in particular unlocks premium wages. Here's how to get in.
Pay: $45,000–$95,000+ | Training: 3–4 year apprenticeship (paid) | Union: IUOE | Requirement: 18+, often a CDL
Heavy equipment operators run the machines that build infrastructure — excavators, bulldozers, graders, loaders, backhoes, and cranes. You'll dig, grade, lift, and move material on construction sites, road projects, pipelines, and more. Skilled operators are precise — grading to fractions of an inch, placing loads exactly. It's a trade where finesse matters as much as power.
The best path is an apprenticeship through the IUOE (International Union of Operating Engineers) — 3–4 years of paid work plus training on multiple machines. Apply at your local. Alternatives include starting as a construction laborer and working up, or attending a heavy equipment operator school (faster but you pay, and it's less respected than an apprenticeship). A CDL is often required to move equipment between sites.
| Stage | Typical Pay |
|---|---|
| Apprentice | $20–$25/hr |
| Journeyman | $35–$55/hr |
| Crane operator (certified) | $60–$80/hr+ |
Real IUOE rates, contractors, and apprenticeships across all 50 states.
View Pay Map →The single biggest pay jump in this trade is becoming a certified crane operator (through NCCCO). Cranes carry the most responsibility and risk on a site, so certified crane operators command the top wages. If you want to maximize earnings as an operator, crane certification is the path.
The main path is an IUOE apprenticeship — 3–4 years of paid work and training. You can also work up from laborer or attend an equipment school, but apprenticeship is best.
Apprentices start around $20–$25/hr, journeymen earn $35–$55/hr, and certified crane operators $60–$80/hr or more.
Yes — good pay, engaging work for people who like machines, steady demand from construction and infrastructure, and crane cert unlocks premium wages.
About this guide: Written by a working journeyman lineman — IBEW, Class A CDL. Corrections welcome.
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