BY STATE

Salary Comparison by State — 2024 BLS Data

How does your state stack up? Official BLS OES May 2024 median wages across all 50 states and D.C. — ranked highest to lowest.

State wages vary dramatically across the United States — from $40,095 in Mississippi to $68,310 in Washington D.C., a gap of more than 70%. These differences reflect industry concentration, labor market competition, and regional cost pressures. High-wage states like Washington and Massachusetts lead in technology and financial services; lower-wage states skew toward agriculture, retail, and hospitality.

The table below shows the overall median annual wage for all workers in each state, derived from BLS OES May 2024 regional wage indices applied to the national all-occupation median of $49,500. These figures represent the midpoint of the full wage distribution — half of all workers in that state earn more, half earn less. For occupation-specific state comparisons, use the salary calculator below to see your exact percentile in any state.

Cost of living complicates the picture. A $60,000 salary in Mississippi has substantially more purchasing power than the same amount in California. Remote workers can sometimes capture the arbitrage — earning wages benchmarked to a high-cost state while living somewhere more affordable. The BLS data gives you the wage side of that equation; pair it with regional cost-of-living indices for a complete picture.

RankStateMedian Wage
1District of Columbia$68,310
2California$62,370
3Massachusetts$60,390
4New York$58,905
5Connecticut$58,410
6New Jersey$58,410
7Hawaii$57,915
8Washington$56,430
9Maryland$55,440
10Colorado$53,955
11Alaska$53,460
12New Hampshire$52,965
13Oregon$52,470
14Rhode Island$52,470
15Illinois$51,975
16Virginia$51,975
17Delaware$51,480
18Minnesota$50,985
19Pennsylvania$49,500
20Nevada$49,005
21Vermont$49,005
22Arizona$48,015
23Florida$48,015
24Texas$48,015
25Utah$47,520
26Wyoming$47,520
27Georgia$47,025
28Wisconsin$47,025
29Maine$46,035
30Michigan$46,035
31North Dakota$46,035
32Nebraska$45,045
33North Carolina$45,045
34Ohio$45,045
35Iowa$44,550
36Indiana$44,055
37Kansas$44,055
38Missouri$44,055
39Idaho$43,560
40Montana$43,560
41New Mexico$43,560
42South Carolina$43,560
43Tennessee$43,560
44Louisiana$43,065
45South Dakota$43,065
46Kentucky$42,570
47Oklahoma$42,075
48Alabama$41,580
49Arkansas$40,590
50West Virginia$40,590
51Mississippi$40,095

Source: BLS OES May 2024. State figures derived by applying BLS regional wage indices to the national all-occupation median of $49,500.

BLS OES 2024 · 116 Occupations

Salary Percentile Calculator

See exactly where your salary ranks among US workers in your field and state.

Based on official BLS data for 116 occupations across all 50 US states.

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Frequently Asked Questions

A salary percentile tells you what percentage of workers in a given occupation earn less than you. For example, if you're at the 70th percentile, you earn more than 70% of workers in that field. It's a more useful benchmark than a simple average because it shows where you stand across the full distribution of wages.

We use linear interpolation between the BLS wage anchor points (10th, 25th, 50th, 75th, and 90th percentiles) to estimate your exact percentile rank. State figures are derived by applying BLS regional wage indices to the national data. For salaries below the 10th or above the 90th percentile, we flag this clearly rather than extrapolating an unreliable estimate.

All data comes from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OES) program, May 2024 release. This is the most comprehensive, official source of US occupational wage data, covering over 800 occupations and nearly every industry. We cover 116 occupation groups across all 50 states and Washington D.C.

If you're below the median (50th percentile) for your occupation in your state, you have a data-backed argument for a raise. Come prepared with your percentile result and the BLS benchmark figures from the table below the gauge. Framing your ask around official government data — rather than salary sites — is often more persuasive to employers and hiring managers.

According to BLS OES May 2024 data, the median annual wage across all occupations in the United States is approximately $49,500. However, this varies enormously by occupation — from around $30,000 for food preparation workers to over $236,000 for physicians and surgeons. That's why comparing within your specific occupation is far more meaningful than a national cross-occupation average.