How much do engineers earn?
- Notes:
- Includes only workers whose highest degree is in a science or engineering field. Excludes part-time workers.
- Aerospace includes aeronautical and astronautical; civil includes architectural and sanitary: electrical includes computer hardware; materials includes metallurgical.
- Notes:
- Includes only workers whose highest degree is in a science or engineering field. Excludes part-time workers. For reasons of confidentiality and/or reliability, salaries of American Indian/Alaska Natives, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islanders, and those of more than one race are not shown.
- Aerospace includes aeronautical and astronautical; civil includes architectural and sanitary: electrical includes computer hardware; materials includes metallurgical.
In 2010, the overall median annual salary of engineers was $87,000. The median annual salary for female engineers was $75,000, $14,000 less than the salary of their male counterparts ($89,000).
In 2010, the median annual salary of engineers overall was $87,000. The salaries of whites ($89,000) and Asians ($88,000) were slightly higher than average, while blacks and Hispanics earned less than average, $78,000 and $73,000, respectively.
Key Observations
- Salaries of both women and men were the highest in aerospace engineering, $99,000 and $102,000 respectively.
- Female engineers made $15,000 less than their male counterparts in chemical, electrical, and materials engineering.
- The salary of women in industrial engineering ($73,000) was nearly the same as that of men ($74,000).
- In industrial engineering, the median annual salary of blacks ($78,000) was higher than the salaries of the other racial/ethnic groups.
- Of all racial/ethnic groups, Asians earned the highest salaries in civil ($79,000) and mechanical engineering ($86,000).