Everything you need to make an informed decision with your child. Earnings, costs, safety, and why the trades are not a fallback — they're often a better path.
Before making one of the biggest financial decisions of your family's life, look at the actual numbers — not the assumptions.
| ⚡ Skilled Trade (e.g. Electrician) | 🎓 4-Year College (avg. non-STEM) | |
|---|---|---|
| Training cost | $5,000–$15,000 (or $0 via apprenticeship) | $100,000–$200,000+ total |
| Time to first paycheck | 6 months – 2 years | 4–6 years |
| Starting salary | $45,000–$65,000 | $38,000–$52,000 (avg. bachelor's grad) |
| Mid-career salary | $75,000–$120,000+ | $55,000–$85,000 (varies greatly) |
| Student debt | $0 (apprenticeship) – $15,000 | $37,000 avg. (many $80K–$150K+) |
| Unemployment rate | ~3% (chronic shortage) | ~4.5% (varies by major) |
| AI replacement risk | Very low (hands-on physical work) | High (many office jobs at risk) |
| Can start a business | Yes — many tradespeople become owners | Possible but less direct path |
Sources: BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook, College Board, NCES. Salaries vary by location and specialization.
"How much does it actually cost to get started?" Pick a trade to see a realistic breakdown of starter tools, training, licensing, and what your child can expect to earn in their first year.
Get a realistic cost breakdown for your child's first year — tools, training, certifications, and expected earnings.
Apprenticeships are one of the best-kept secrets in workforce development. Here's how they work.
Your child applies to a registered apprenticeship program through a union, employer, or trade association. No prior experience required for most.
Apprentices are paid employees from their first day. Starting pay is typically 40–50% of journeyman wages and increases every 6 months.
Most learning happens in the field alongside experienced tradespeople. Evening classes supplement the hands-on training — usually 2 nights per week.
After 3–5 years, your child graduates as a licensed journeyman earning full wages — with zero student debt and years of real experience.
Become a master tradesperson, supervisor, contractor, or business owner. Many tradespeople earn $100K–$200K+ running their own companies.
A 4-year electrician apprenticeship pays roughly $140,000–$180,000 in wages while your child trains. A 4-year college costs $100,000–$200,000 with no income. The difference is $240,000–$380,000 before they even graduate.
Safety is one of the first questions parents ask. Here's what the data actually shows.
All apprentices are required to complete OSHA 10 or OSHA 30 safety training before working on job sites. Safety is the industry's #1 priority and enforced by federal law.
Workplace injury rates in construction and skilled trades have declined over 60% in the last 30 years due to better equipment, training, and safety regulations.
Most union apprenticeships and employer-sponsored programs include full health, dental, and vision insurance from day one — often better than white-collar office jobs.
Apprentices never work alone on dangerous tasks. All work is supervised by licensed journeymen and masters. Your child will be mentored, not thrown into danger.
Every employer is required to carry workers' compensation insurance. If an injury does occur, your child is fully covered for medical care and lost wages.
Sedentary office work is associated with higher rates of obesity, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and mental health issues. Trades workers tend to be physically active and healthier long-term.
Many parents don't realize how much financial support is available for trade training — including options that don't exist for 4-year colleges.
Federal Pell Grants of up to $7,395/year are available for eligible students in certificate programs at community colleges and trade schools. No repayment required.
Registered apprentices are paid employees. No tuition — the employer pays for training. Your child earns $18–$30/hr while learning. No financial aid needed.
The Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act funds free trade training for qualifying youth ages 14–24. Contact your local American Job Center to find out if your child qualifies.
Dozens of trade-specific scholarships exist — from SkillsUSA, NAWIC, ABC, and IBEW. Many go unclaimed every year because students don't know they exist.
Search programs, watch real career videos, and find scholarships — all in one place, for free.
Search programs → Watch career videos →