Career Guide · Plumber

How to Become a Plumber in 2026 — Pay, Training & Career Guide

Written by a working tradesperson · IBEW · Class A CDL  |  June 2026  |  8 min read

What's in this guide

  1. What a plumber does
  2. How to become one
  3. What plumbers earn
  4. Is it worth it?
  5. Common questions

Plumbing is one of the most recession-proof trades there is — water and gas systems always need installing, repairing, and maintaining, and the work can't be automated or sent overseas. It also has one of the clearest paths to owning a profitable business. Here's how to get in.

Quick facts

Pay: $50,000–$100,000+  |  Training: 4–5 year apprenticeship (paid)  |  Union: UA or non-union  |  Requirement: 18+, HS diploma/GED

What a plumber does

Plumbers install and repair the systems that move water, gas, and waste through buildings — supply lines, drains, fixtures, water heaters, and gas piping. Work ranges from residential service calls to large commercial and industrial new construction. There's also specialized work like medical gas, backflow prevention, and hydronic heating that pays a premium.

The job mixes physical work (running pipe, soldering, pressing fittings) with problem-solving (diagnosing leaks, reading plans, meeting code). Service plumbers are out solving different problems every day; new-construction plumbers rough in entire buildings.

How to become one

Like most trades, the path is a 4–5 year paid apprenticeship. You can go union through the UA (United Association) — apply at your local — or through a non-union contractor. You'll earn a progressive wage, attend classroom training, and accumulate the hours needed to test for your journeyman plumbing license. After more experience you can earn a master plumber license, which lets you pull permits and run a business.

What plumbers earn

StageTypical Pay
Apprentice (yr 1)$17–$24/hr
Journeyman$28–$48/hr
Master / Service$40–$60/hr
Business owner$90k–$200k+

Service and emergency plumbing pays well because of the convenience premium, and business owners with a few trucks running can do very well.

See plumber pay in your state

Real rates, top employers, and apprenticeships across all 50 states.

View Pay Map →

Is it worth it?

Strongly yes for the right person. Plumbing is stable, well-paid, impossible to offshore, and a proven route to business ownership. The downsides are real though — you'll deal with the unpleasant side of the job (sewage, tight crawlspaces), and service work can mean being on call. But few trades offer this combination of security and business upside.

Common questions

How long does it take to become a plumber?

A plumbing apprenticeship takes about 4–5 years of paid work plus classroom training, after which you test for your journeyman license. No college required.

How much do plumbers make?

Apprentices start around $17–$24/hr, journeymen earn $28–$48/hr, and master plumbers or business owners can earn $90,000 to $200,000+.

Is plumbing a good career?

Yes — it's recession-resistant, well-paid, can't be automated or outsourced, and offers one of the clearest paths to owning a profitable trades business.

About this guide: Written by a working journeyman lineman and former gas fitter — IBEW, Class A CDL. Corrections welcome.

Before You Decide
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