Electrician Apprenticeships in Utah
Utah has 96 registered apprenticeship sponsors training electricians — 4 of them union or joint labor-management programs. Apprentices earn a wage from day one and finish without tuition debt.
Registered sponsors
96
Union / joint programs
4
Median electrician wage
$61,430
Utah, all experience levels
Job growth 2022–2032
+42.2%
1,740 openings/yr
Largest Registered Sponsors
Union and joint labor-management programs are listed first — they typically pay the best apprentice rates and charge no tuition.
| Sponsor | City | Program type |
|---|---|---|
| Mountain States Line Constructors Union / joint | West Jordan | Multiple Employer |
| UTAH ELECTRICAL JATC Union / joint | West Jordan | Multiple Employer |
| Utah Operating Engineers, JATC Union / joint | SANDY | Multiple Employer |
| Weber County School District Union / joint | West Haven | Single Employer |
| A & E Electric, Inc. | Moab | Single Employer |
| All Pro Electric, Inc. | WEST JORDAN | Single Employer |
| ARCO Electric, Inc. | SANDY | Single Employer |
| Associated General Contractors | Salt Lake City | Multiple Employer |
| Autoliv | Ogden | Single Employer |
| AUTOLIV INFLATORS | BRIGHAM CITY | Single Employer |
Source: U.S. Department of Labor, Registered Apprenticeship sponsors (apprenticeship.gov).
What Electricians Earn in Utah
Wages
- Median annual wage: $61,430
- Average annual wage: $63,010
- Electricians employed statewide: 11,360
Source: BLS OEWS, May 2024. Apprentices typically start at 40–50% of the journeyman rate and get scheduled raises.
10-year outlook
- Projected growth 2022–2032: +42.2%
- Average openings per year: 1,740
- Employment: 11,780 → 16,750
Source: Projections Central / state workforce agencies.
Prefer the school route? Compare Electrician programs
Utah Licensing for Electricians
ELECTRICIAN
- Education: Undetermined
- Experience: Undetermined
- Exam: Undetermined
- Continuing education: Undetermined
Issuing agency: Utah Department of Commerece · agency website
Source: CareerOneStop License Finder (U.S. Department of Labor). Time spent in a registered apprenticeship generally counts toward license experience requirements.