Elevator mechanic is consistently the highest-paid building trade in the country. It's competitive to get into and the work is demanding and technical — but the pay is exceptional. Here's how to break in.
Pay: $80,000–$150,000+ | Training: 4–5 year apprenticeship (paid) | Union: IUEC / NEIEP | Requirement: 18+, HS diploma/GED
Elevator mechanics (elevator constructors) install, maintain, modernize, and repair elevators, escalators, and moving walkways. The work blends electrical, mechanical, and hydraulic skills — wiring control systems, rigging heavy components, troubleshooting complex machinery, and ensuring everything meets strict safety codes. It's some of the most technically varied work in the trades.
The path is an apprenticeship through the IUEC (International Union of Elevator Constructors), run via the NEIEP training program. It's a 4–5 year paid apprenticeship combining on-the-job work with classroom instruction. You progress from helper to apprentice to mechanic, with wages stepping up throughout.
| Stage | Typical Pay |
|---|---|
| Apprentice (early) | $25–$32/hr |
| Apprentice (yr 4) | $45–$62/hr |
| Mechanic | $53–$94/hr |
| Mechanic in Charge | Top scale + premium |
Real IUEC rates and apprenticeship locals across all 50 states.
View Pay Map →Be honest with yourself: this is one of the hardest apprenticeships to get into because the pay makes it so desirable and the union keeps numbers controlled. Applications open periodically and draw large pools. To improve your odds: apply the moment a window opens, ace the aptitude test, present well in the interview, and reapply if you don't get in the first time. Persistence pays — many mechanics applied more than once.
Through an IUEC apprenticeship via the NEIEP program — a 4–5 year paid apprenticeship. Spots are highly competitive, so apply early and be persistent.
One of the highest-paid trades — apprentices start around $25–$32/hr and journeyman mechanics earn $80,000 to $150,000+, with top markets exceeding $90/hr.
The work is highly technical and safety-critical, the union is strong, and the supply of qualified mechanics is deliberately limited.
About this guide: Written by a working journeyman lineman — IBEW, Class A CDL. Corrections welcome.
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Run the Wealth Calculator → Compare Elevator Mechanic vs a degree