WAGE DATA · SOC 49-9069
INSTRUMENT TECHNICIAN PAY
IN MINNESOTA.
Minnesota instrument technicians earn a median of $33.38/hr (BLS 2024). 60 workers employed statewide. Compare market wages, federal prevailing rates, and per-diem baselines below.
// BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS · STATEWIDEOEWS · MAY 2024
HOURLY MEDIAN
$33.38/hr
MEAN HOURLY
$33.49/hr
ANNUAL MEDIAN
$69K
EMPLOYED
60
10th · $27.59MEDIAN · $33.3890th · $43.44
// DAVIS-BACON · FEDERAL PREVAILING WAGEDATA SOON
Federal Davis-Bacon prevailing wage rates for instrument technicians in Minnesota will be imported from SAM.gov in our next data refresh. These are the legally-required minimum wages on federally-funded construction projects — crucial for comparing offers against the federal floor.
// GSA PER DIEMDATA SOON
GSA per-diem rates for Minnesota will be available in the next data refresh.
// ROADHAND COMMUNITY DATABE FIRST
What are workers actually earning?
Government data is a baseline. Real take-home pay — including per diem, OT rules, housing allowances — comes from workers on the ground. Submit your pay anonymously to help the next hand.
SHARE YOUR PAYOTHER TRADES IN MINNESOTA
INSTRUMENT TECHNICIAN PAY IN OTHER STATES
FAQ
How much does a instrument technician earn in Minnesota?+
According to BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (2024), instrument technicians in Minnesota earn a median of $33.38/hr. That's roughly $69K/year for a full-time schedule at straight time.
What's the top pay for instrument technicians in Minnesota?+
The top 10% of instrument technicians in Minnesota earn more than $43.44/hr (BLS 2024). That represents experienced workers, supervisors, or those on high-per-diem travel contracts.
How many instrument technicians work in Minnesota?+
BLS reports 60 instrument technicians employed in Minnesota as of 2024. Numbers fluctuate with major construction cycles — when big projects like LNG terminals or data centers start, demand spikes.
Do instrument technicians in Minnesota get per diem?+
Per diem is standard on travel contracts. The federal GSA baseline for Minnesota is typically $150-$260/day depending on the city. Contractors may set their per diem higher or lower — if it's below the GSA floor, you're subsidizing the contractor's housing budget out of pocket.
What's Davis-Bacon prevailing wage?+
Davis-Bacon rates are the legally-required minimum wages on federally-funded construction projects — base pay plus fringe benefits. Every contractor working a federal job must pay at least the Davis-Bacon rate for that county and trade. Private-sector jobs don't have to match, but many do as a competitive floor.