Maintenance & Repair Salary

Professionals responsible for the upkeep, repair, and efficient functioning of systems and facilities across various sectors. Use this page to compare employer-posted base salary ranges by state and metro, with historical trends from current job postings. Excludes bonuses, equity, tips, and benefits. See methodology. Updated June 18, 2026.

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Current salary snapshot

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Role Group by State (Mid Salary)

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Role Group Salary Range (Lower • Mid • Higher)

Posting volume Low → High

Salary by State and Role Snapshot

Top salaries by state

MarketHigher salariesPostings
Alaska$100K20
Delaware$100K45
District of Columbia$91K71
North Dakota$88K48
Massachusetts$83K412
Connecticut$83K135
Idaho$81K83
Nevada$80K165

Top salaries after cost of living

MarketHigher salaries, adjustedPostings
Delaware$100K45
North Dakota$98K48
Alaska$98K20
Oklahoma$85K178
Idaho$85K83
District of Columbia$83K71
Arkansas$81K100
Connecticut$80K135

Top salaries by metro

Related salary pages

Figures shown here are grouped from postings that include salary ranges; lower (p25) is the lower listed range, mid (p50) is the middle listed salary, and higher (p75) is the higher listed range.

How to Read Salary Ranges

Salary ranges show what employers are currently advertising for a role. Start with the exact role or closest role group, compare pay across states and metros, and treat lower, mid, and higher values as market anchors rather than a strict experience ladder. Role scope, location, seniority, contract type, travel work, industry demand, and sample size can all move the numbers.

Using Salary Ranges in a Salary Conversation

Lower salary range
Useful for early-career roles, narrower scope, or stretch opportunities.
Mid listed salary
A practical anchor when your background closely matches the posting.
Higher salary range
Stronger anchor for scarce skills, senior experience, management responsibility, specialized expertise, or competing offers.
Location salary gap
Useful for discussing local market pay, relocation, remote compensation, or cost-of-living adjustments.

Frequently Asked Questions

How should I use this salary tool?
Compare pay across states and cities, then set a realistic target before applying or negotiating. State views show broad regional differences; metro views compare specific cities.
What do lower, mid, and higher salaries mean?
They show how advertised pay is distributed for a role. Lower is near the bottom of listed ranges, mid is around the middle, and higher is toward the top.
Where does the salary data come from?
Current U.S. job postings where employers list pay. The data is grouped by job type, state, metro area, and pay level; it does not use Bureau of Labor Statistics wage estimates.
Does the salary data include bonuses, equity, or benefits?
No. It reflects listed base pay. Tips, bonuses, commissions, equity, benefits, and other compensation are excluded when listed separately.
Why do salaries differ by state and city?
Markets differ by employer mix, industry, labor demand, competition, and cost of living. Higher pay in one city may not mean higher purchasing power.

How the Salary Numbers Are Calculated

Figures reflect base pay listed in job postings, not guaranteed pay, actual total earnings, Bureau of Labor Statistics wage estimates, or official wage statistics. Salaries are converted to yearly U.S. dollars where possible and grouped by role, location, and pay level. Lower is the lower listed range, mid is the middle listed salary, and higher is the higher listed range. Hourly wages are annualized using a 2,080-hour work year; cost-of-living adjustment uses Bureau of Economic Analysis Regional Price Parities, or BEA RPP. Tips, bonuses, equity, commissions, and benefits are excluded when listed separately from base pay.

Important Notes About the Data

Only postings that list salary information are included, so coverage is stronger in some states than others. Current role mix can affect results, including contract work, travel work, senior roles, junior roles, specialized jobs, and industry-specific demand. On mobile, regional charts may default to areas with the most available data so the view stays readable.