Roofing Salary in Oregon 2026
Roofing salary in Oregon 2026. Average hourly rate, annual pay, top metros, career path. BLS OES wage data.
Roofing pay in Oregon (2026)
- Median annual salary: $51,929
- Median hourly rate: $25/hour
- Entry-level (apprentice / 1-2 years): $36,351 ($17/hr)
- Senior (10+ years / master): $72,701 ($35/hr)
Pay reflects Oregon cost-of-living and union/non-union mix. Top metros pay 10-25% above the state median.
What drives Roofing pay in Oregon
- License classification - master/journeyman pay 30-50% more than apprentices
- Specialty certifications (EPA 608 for HVAC, OSHA 30 for roofing, IICRC for restoration)
- Union vs. non-union - union typically pays 20-35% more with full benefits
- Commercial vs. residential - commercial pays 15-25% more
- Oregon metro area - high-cost metros add 15-30%
Oregon Roofing licensing requirements that affect pay
Oregon Construction Contractors Board (CCB) - $325 + $20K bond + liability insurance. Licensed contractors typically command 25-50% higher pay than unlicensed counterparts. See Oregon Roofing license requirements.
How roofing pay actually moves in Oregon
Oregon roofing pay is not a single number. It is a range that moves based on license level, specialty certifications, the metro market the worker lives in, whether the shop is union or open, and whether the work is residential or commercial. The same roofing professional can earn entry-level wages in a low-cost rural Oregon county and earn the senior rate in a high-cost Oregon metro doing identical scope, because the wage is keyed to local cost of living more than to skill alone.
The wage curve over a career follows a predictable pattern: apprentice years are roughly 60 to 75 percent of journeyman pay, journeyman years are the median, master certification adds 15 to 25 percent above journeyman, and specialty certifications (EPA 608 Universal for HVAC, OSHA 30 plus IICRC for restoration, NICET for fire protection) push that further. The roofing who picks the high-leverage certifications early sees their pay accelerate faster than the one who waits until later in their career to add them.
Oregon licensing requirements add another layer to the pay equation. The unlicensed roofing doing the same work as a licensed peer earns 25 to 50 percent less because they cannot bid the larger jobs, cannot pull permits, and cannot work for the general contractors who require licensed subs. The licensed roofing can lead crews, pull permits on their own license, and qualify for the commercial work that pays the most.
Career path from apprentice to running a Oregon roofing shop
- Years 1 to 2 (apprentice). $36,351 annual. Working under a journeyman, learning the trade, building the hour count needed for journeyman status. The smart apprentice picks up at least one specialty cert during this window.
- Years 3 to 5 (journeyman). $51,929 annual. Working independently on standard scope. Many roofing professionals stay journeymen for the rest of their careers because the W-2 schedule and benefits beat going independent.
- Years 6 to 10 (senior journeyman / lead). $62,315 annual. Running crews, mentoring apprentices, building the operational chops needed to either take master certification or start a shop.
- Years 10+ (master / shop owner). $72,701 as a master journeyman working W-2. A solo shop owner running their own license can clear $129,824 net of expenses in a good year, or more if they grow to two or three trucks.
Why Oregon roofing pay rises or falls year over year
Oregon roofing wages move primarily based on labor supply and demand at the state level. When Oregon construction permits rise, demand for roofing labor rises, which pushes wages up. When permits fall or weather curtails the building season, wages flatten or drop. The Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment Statistics survey publishes Oregon-specific data annually, and the trend over the last five years for roofing has been steadily upward with occasional flat years during economic downturns.
Beyond the macro trend, individual roofing pay depends on which employer the worker chooses. A larger Oregon shop with steady work and a good benefits package can offer lower hourly pay but higher total compensation than a smaller shop with no benefits and variable hours. The worker who looks at hourly rate alone misses the value of paid time off, health insurance, retirement contributions, and tool allowances.
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