Career Guide · Ironworker

How to Become an Ironworker in 2026 — Pay, Training & Career Guide

Written by a working tradesperson · IBEW · Class A CDL  |  June 2026  |  7 min read

What's in this guide

  1. What an ironworker does
  2. Types of ironwork
  3. How to become one
  4. What ironworkers earn
  5. Common questions

Ironworkers build the skeletons of the modern world — skyscrapers, bridges, stadiums. It's tough, high, dangerous work that pays well and carries serious pride. Here's how to get into it.

Quick facts

Pay: $65,000–$120,000+  |  Training: 3–4 year apprenticeship (paid)  |  Union: Iron Workers  |  Requirement: 18+, not afraid of heights

What an ironworker does

Ironworkers erect and connect the structural steel and reinforcing materials that form buildings, bridges, and infrastructure. The work involves rigging and hoisting heavy steel, bolting and welding connections, and — for structural ironworkers — walking and working on steel high above the ground. It's physically demanding and requires comfort with heights that most people simply don't have.

Types of ironwork

Structural: Erecting the steel frame of buildings and bridges — the iconic high-steel work. Reinforcing (rodbusters): Installing rebar in concrete structures. Ornamental: Stairs, railings, curtain walls, finish metal. Rigging/machinery moving: Setting heavy equipment. Most ironworkers develop across several of these.

How to become one

The path is an apprenticeship through the Iron Workers union — a 3–4 year paid program with on-the-job training and classroom instruction. Apply at your local. You'll learn rigging, welding, connecting, and safety. Non-union contractor paths exist too, though union generally offers better pay, benefits, and training.

What ironworkers earn

StageTypical Pay
Apprentice$18–$25/hr
Journeyman$30–$50/hr
With OT / travel$65k–$120k+

See ironworker pay in your state

Real rates and union locals across all 50 states.

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Common questions

How do you become an ironworker?

Through an Iron Workers union apprenticeship — a 3–4 year paid program. Apply at your local. Non-union paths exist but union offers better pay and benefits.

How much do ironworkers make?

Apprentices start around $18–$25/hr, journeymen $30–$50/hr, and with overtime and travel $65,000 to $120,000+.

Is ironworking dangerous?

Yes — it's one of the more dangerous trades, working at height on steel in all weather. Strong safety training makes it manageable, but it demands focus and comfort with heights.

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

Before You Decide
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