HVAC Pay by State

HVAC Technician Salary in Maine (2026)

Real pay, training programs, and how to start — from US Trade Route, built by a working tradesman. Updated July 2026.

Maine is heating country — long, hard winters keep furnaces, boilers, and heat pumps working overtime, and that keeps HVAC techs busy when other trades slow down. No-heat calls in January are emergencies, and emergencies pay (peak season/OT adds $6-18k). Add summer AC season on the other end and Maine techs get two busy seasons a year.

Maine HVAC Pay Range

$39-88k
⏱ Peak season/OT adds $6-18k

Pay by Experience Level in Maine

Here's how HVAC pay progresses in Maine, from your first months as a helper to running your own calls as a lead or master tech. Train through a paid apprenticeship and you earn a paycheck from day one — or go the trade-school route and be field-ready in as little as 6-12 months.

Helper / Apprentice$19/hr
Experienced Tech$28-35/hr
Lead / Master Tech$43/hr
Before You Decide
Is HVAC Worth It vs College?

See how a Maine HVAC career stacks up against a four-year degree — lifetime earnings, debt, and net worth, side by side.

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Top HVAC Employers in Maine

These are the contractors and home-service companies Maine HVAC techs rate highest, based on reviews from workers in the field. Pay, on-call schedules, and culture vary a lot between shops — it pays to ask around before you sign on.

Dead River Company★ 4.2 (22 reviews)
Gagne & Son / regional mechanical contractors★ 4.2 (32 reviews)
F.W. Webb service network★ 3.9 (12 reviews)

HVAC Training in Maine

Two honest ways in: a trade school or community college program (6 months to 2 years, then hit the field), or a paid apprenticeship where you earn while you learn (3-5 years to full tech). Both routes get you the EPA 608 certification — the federal card every tech needs to handle refrigerants.

Southern Maine Community CollegeHeating & Cooling Technology
Northern Maine Community CollegeHVAC/R Program
Kennebec Valley Community CollegeHVAC Certificate

How to Become an HVAC Tech in Maine

The path is the same proven route used across the country, applied locally: get your high school diploma or GED, pick your route — trade school for speed or an apprenticeship for zero-debt training — and get your EPA 608 certification along the way. From there it's experience: helper to tech to lead, with service, install, and commercial refrigeration all open as specialties. Maine licensing requirements kick in as you advance; your school or employer will walk you through them.

For the complete step-by-step — certifications, what the work is actually like, and how to pick a program — read our full guide to becoming an HVAC technician and our EPA 608 certification prep guide.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much do HVAC technicians make in Maine?
In Maine, HVAC pay ranges roughly $39-88k depending on experience. Helpers and new techs start lower, experienced and lead techs earn the top of that range, and peak-season overtime and on-call emergency work often push total pay higher. Peak season/OT adds $6-18k.
How long does it take to become an HVAC tech in Maine?
Most HVAC training programs run 6 months to 2 years — a certificate is the fast route, an associate degree the deeper one. Paid apprenticeships (3-5 years) let you earn a wage while you learn instead of paying tuition. Either way you'll get your EPA 608 certification, the federal card every tech needs to handle refrigerants.
Do you need a degree to be an HVAC technician in Maine?
No four-year degree. You need a high school diploma or GED, HVAC training (trade school certificate or an apprenticeship), and your EPA 608 certification. Depending on where you work, state or local licensing may apply as you advance — your school or employer walks you through it.
Where do Maine HVAC techs get trained?
Through trade schools and community/technical college HVAC programs in Maine, plus paid apprenticeships through contractors and UA/ABC programs. Local programs include Southern Maine Community College and Northern Maine Community College. Top local employers include Dead River Company, Gagne & Son / regional mechanical contractors, F.W. Webb service network.