How to Become a Electrician in Connecticut
The trade that powers everything.
Median Salary (CT)
$76,790
Apprenticeship
4–5 years
License Required
Yes
Job Demand
Very High
What Electricians Earn in Connecticut
Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment & Wage Statistics (OEWS)
Connecticut Median
$76,790
per year
National Median
$61,590
per year
Entry Level (25th)
$45,520
Median
$61,590
Experienced (75th)
$82,380
Top Earners (90th)
$101,000
National percentiles shown. Connecticut-specific percentile data varies.
Career Path
From apprentice to running your own operation in Connecticut
Apprentice Electrician
$35,000–$52,000Years 0–5
Enrolled in a 4–5 year IBEW union or non-union apprenticeship. Work alongside journeypersons on real job sites while attending classroom instruction in electrical theory, codes, and safety.
Journeyperson Electrician
$55,000–$80,000Years 5–10
Pass your journeyperson exam and work independently. Most journeypersons specialize in residential, commercial, or industrial work. This is where the career really pays off.
Master Electrician
$70,000–$100,000Years 8–12
After 2+ years as a journeyperson, pass the master exam. Required in most states to pull permits and supervise other electricians. Opens the door to contractor work.
Electrical Contractor
$90,000–$250,000+Years 10+
Use your master license to start your own contracting business. Electricians who go independent and build a crew routinely earn $150,000–$250,000+.
How to Get Started in Connecticut
Step-by-step path into the electrician trade
- 1
Join an IBEW union apprenticeship (ibew.org) — the gold standard path for electricians. Applications open in spring; competition is real but manageable.
Browse apprenticeship programs → - 2
Prefer non-union? Find an electrical contractor willing to sponsor your apprenticeship. You earn while you learn either way.
Find hiring contractors → - 3
Some states require a pre-apprenticeship course before you can apply. These are often free and make your application stronger.
Find pre-apprenticeship programs → - 4
Once you've logged your apprenticeship hours, you'll sit for your journeyperson licensing exam — required in most states before working independently.
Start exam prep →