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Electrician vs Smart Home Installer: which trade should you choose?

Electrician carries the higher journeyman pay ceiling in the US. The right choice depends on which day-to-day work and pathway fit you.

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Side by side
ElectricianSmart Home Installer
Typical pay (US, journeyman)$52,000–$85,000$46,000–$78,000
Time to qualify4-6 years
Cost to qualify$150-$400 for exam and license fees
Job outlookVery HighVery High

Pay and outlook: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics 2024. Time and cost: licensing requirements (US sample). Adjust for your state →

The verdict

Which should you choose?

Electrician

Choose Electrician if you want the higher pay ceiling ($52,000–$85,000).

Full Electrician guide

Smart Home Installer

Choose Smart Home Installer if its day-to-day work fits how you like to work.

Full Smart Home Installer guide
FAQ
Does Electrician or Smart Home Installer pay more?

At journeyman level in the US, Electrician typically earns $52,000–$85,000 and Smart Home Installer earns $46,000–$78,000. Top earners — masters and business owners — clear the upper bound by 30–60% in either trade. Use the salary calculator to adjust for your state and experience.

Which is faster to qualify for, Electrician or Smart Home Installer?

Both trades are entered through a paid apprenticeship — you earn while you train, with no degree or tuition debt required.

Can I switch from Electrician to Smart Home Installer?

Yes. The trades share core skills — blueprint reading, code awareness, customer service and tool handling — so experience in one shortens the path to the other. You will still need the destination trade's specific licensing.