Operator Pay · New York
Heavy Equipment Operator Salary in New York (2026)
Real pay by career stage, top employers, and apprenticeships — researched and maintained by a working tradesman. Updated 2026.
Heavy equipment operators run the dozers, excavators, graders, and cranes that build everything — roads, bridges, buildings, pipelines. It's a high-paying trade you enter through a paid apprenticeship, not college, and crane-certified operators sit among the best-paid tradespeople in New York. Here's the real pay, the employers, and how to get started.
New York Operator Pay Range
$75-135k
⏱ OT adds $18-40k
Pay by Career Stage in New York
Here's how operator pay progresses in New York — from paid apprentice to journeyman operator to crane-certified. Apprentices earn while they learn, and crane certification (NCCCO) is the big pay jump.
Apprentice$34/hr
Journeyman$64/hr
Crane Cert$76/hr
Before You Decide
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Top Operator Employers in New York
These are unions, contractors, and programs New York operators work through, based on field reviews. The International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE) is the backbone of the trade in most areas.
IUOE Local 15★ 4.2 (24 reviews)
IUOE Local 832★ 4.0 (16 reviews)
Apprenticeships & Training in New York
You get into this trade by getting hired into an apprenticeship, not by paying tuition. These are the programs that feed New York's operating engineers. IUOE apprenticeships are the main route; some technical colleges offer pre-apprentice heavy-equipment programs.
IUOE Local 15 apprenticeshipApprenticeship (New York City)
How to Become an Operator in New York
The path: get your high school diploma or GED, get a driver's license (often a CDL helps), and apply to an IUOE operating engineer apprenticeship. You'll train on real equipment as a paid apprentice for 3–4 years, then test out as a journeyman at full New York scale. Add NCCCO crane certification to reach the top of the pay range.
For the full step-by-step — the equipment, certifications, and what the work is really like — read our full guide to becoming a heavy equipment operator.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How much do heavy equipment operators make in New York?
In New York, operator pay ranges roughly $75-135k depending on career stage and certifications. Apprentices start lower, journeyman operators earn the middle, and crane-certified operators earn the most. OT adds $18-40k.
How long does it take to become an operator in New York?
Most operating engineer apprenticeships in New York run about 3 to 4 years. You earn a paycheck the whole time — apprentices are paid, not paying tuition. Crane operators add NCCCO certification, which opens the highest pay.
Do you need a license to run heavy equipment in New York?
For most earthmoving equipment, no license is required — you need training and an apprenticeship or employer hire. For cranes, you need NCCCO (National Commission for the Certification of Crane Operators) certification, which is the credential that unlocks top operator pay in New York.
Where do New York operators find apprenticeships?
Mainly through the International Union of Operating Engineers (IUOE) and its apprenticeship programs, plus union contractors and some technical colleges. Top local employers and programs include IUOE Local 15, IUOE Local 832.