Carpenter Apprenticeship in Maryland

Wages, programs & career outlook

Carpenters frame buildings, install doors and windows, build cabinets, and finish out interiors — everything from stud walls to stair treads. The trade splits into rough (framing, structural) and finish (trim, cabinetry) specialties, often overlapping on a job.

MD Median Salary
$60,130/yr
+1% vs. national
National Median
$59,310/yr
MD Employment
10,460
Carpenters employed
MD Sponsors
8
Registered programs
Training Term
4.0 yrs
Time-Based
Job Growth
4.5%
2024–2034 projected
Annual Openings
74,100
Nationally, per yr

Carpenter Apprenticeship in Maryland: Quick Facts

What apprenticeship means here

A registered carpenter apprenticeship in Maryland combines paid on-the-job training with classroom instruction. Programs typically run 4.0 years and follow a time-based structure. You earn wages from day one — apprentices are employees, not students.

Maryland pay vs. national

Median carpenter wages in Maryland are $60,130/year, +1% above the national median of $59,310. Wages scale with experience — journey-level workers earn substantially more than apprentices.

Where to find programs

Maryland has 8 registered apprenticeship sponsors for carpenter listed in the U.S. Department of Labor's apprenticeship.gov directory. The sponsor list further down includes joint labor-management programs (JATCs), individual employers, and contractor associations.

Job-market outlook

The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects 4.5% job growth for carpenters nationally between 2024 and 2034, with approximately 74,100 annual openings each year (replacement plus growth combined). Apprenticeship demand tends to track local construction and infrastructure spending — Maryland-specific outlook can vary from national figures.

Maryland Wage Spread

Annual wages for Carpenters in Maryland across all experience levels.

10th pct
$39,120
Median
$60,130
90th pct
$88,560
Middle 50% of workers earn $47,520$68,690

Current Carpenter Apprenticeship Openings in Maryland

No carpenter apprenticeship openings are currently listed on apprenticeship.gov for Maryland. The sponsors listed below accept applications on a rolling basis — contact them directly. Consider setting up an alert on apprenticeship.gov to be notified when new listings are posted.

Listings aggregated from apprenticeship.gov (US Dept. of Labor). Data refreshed daily.

Carpenter Apprenticeship Sponsors in Maryland

8 carpenter-related registered sponsors identified in the DOL ApprenticeshipUSA directory for Maryland. Directory lists sponsor names only — contact each organization directly to confirm current carpenter apprenticeship openings.

Organization City County
MID-ATLANTIC CARPENTERS' TRAINING CENTERS BALTIMORE Baltimore
Mid-Atlantic Carpenters' Training Centers - Washington, D.C. Baltimore Prince George'S County
Mid-Atlantic Carpenters’ Training Centers - Baltimore Baltimore Baltimore City County
MID-ATLANTIC CARPENTERS' TRAINING CENTERS CUMBERLAND Cumberland
Mid-Atlantic Carpenters' Training Centers - Cumberland Area Carpenters Cumberland Allegany County
EASTERN ATLANTC STATES CARPENTERS TECHNICAL CENTERS Upper Marlboro
J & C Framing, LLC Upper Marlboro
JAC Eastern Atlantic States Carpenters Technical Centers - LOCAL 205 Upper Marlboro Prince George'S County
Search apprenticeship.gov for current Carpenter openings

Filter by occupation code 47-2031 and state MD for the most relevant results.

Carpenter Apprenticeship in Maryland

The 8 Carpenter-related registered sponsors in Maryland mean apprenticeship programs exist but aren't abundant. Building relationships with local contractors and trade unions is often more effective than waiting for formal application windows.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average Carpenter salary in Maryland?
The median annual wage for Carpenters in Maryland is $60,130 as of May 2024. Wages range from $39,120 at the 10th percentile to $88,560 at the 90th percentile.
How long is a Carpenter apprenticeship?
Most Carpenter apprenticeships run 4 years. Apprentices work under a journeyman while attending classes, typically earning wages from day one with scheduled increases.
What's the difference between a Carpenter apprenticeship and trade school?
The key difference: apprenticeships pay you during training while trade schools charge tuition. Many employers prefer apprenticeship-trained Carpenters, but trade school can give you a head start on the classroom requirements.
How do I find a Carpenter apprenticeship in Maryland?
Contact one of the 8 Carpenter-adjacent registered sponsors in Maryland (listed below), or search apprenticeship.gov for current openings. Local union halls, community colleges, and the state apprenticeship agency are good first stops.
How much do Carpenter apprentices earn?
Apprentices are paid employees from the start. In Maryland, a first-year Carpenter apprentice might earn around $30,065/yr (roughly half the $60,130 journeyman median), with scheduled raises throughout the 4-year program.

Prefer Trade School Instead?

Apprenticeships pay from day one, but the classroom-first path may fit better for some. Carpenters also train through trade school programs — shorter timeline, more upfront cost.

Compare 15 Carpenters programs nationwide →
Too few Maryland-based programs to compare locally — see the national list and filter.

Carpenter in Other States

Other Apprenticeships in Maryland

Data: Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS May 2024, DOL RAPIDS Registered Apprenticeship database, ApprenticeshipUSA Sponsor Directory.