Skip to content
AffordMap
Public Safety career guide

How to Become a Protective Service Workers, All Other

Protective Service Workers, All Others earn a median salary of $42,540/year in the United States. Most positions require High school diploma or equivalent. The highest-paying states include New Hampshire, District of Columbia, Alabama.

$43K
Median salary
High school diploma or equivalent
Education required
N/A
10-year growth
81,500
U.S. employment

Where Protective Service Workers, All Others have the most money left over after rent

Median pay minus estimated federal + state + FICA taxes, minus 12 months of rent at HUD's 2-bedroom Fair Market Rent. Darker green means more money left over each year. Hover any state for the breakdown.

Protective Service Workers, All Other disposable income by state, after taxes and rentUS map showing how much money is left over each year for a median-paid protective service workers, all other after estimated federal + state + FICA taxes and a 2-bedroom apartment at HUD Fair Market Rent. Darker green means more money left over. Click any state for its full profile.AlabamaMedian pay$86KTake-home (after tax)$65KRent (2BR)$1,085/moLeft over after rent$52K/yr#2nd nationally →AlaskaMedian pay$56KTake-home (after tax)$47KRent (2BR)$1,643/moLeft over after rent$27K/yr#12th nationally →ArizonaMedian pay$49KTake-home (after tax)$40KRent (2BR)$1,437/moLeft over after rent$23K/yr#25th nationally →ColoradoMedian pay$44KTake-home (after tax)$36KRent (2BR)$1,832/moLeft over after rent$14K/yr#44th nationally →FloridaMedian pay$44KTake-home (after tax)$38KRent (2BR)$1,658/moLeft over after rent$18K/yr#37th nationally →GeorgiaMedian pay$45KTake-home (after tax)$36KRent (2BR)$1,434/moLeft over after rent$19K/yr#34th nationally →IndianaMedian pay$48KTake-home (after tax)$39KRent (2BR)$1,144/moLeft over after rent$25K/yr#14th nationally →KansasMedian pay$42KTake-home (after tax)$34KRent (2BR)$1,066/moLeft over after rent$21K/yr#28th nationally →MaineMedian pay$50KTake-home (after tax)$40KRent (2BR)$1,281/moLeft over after rent$25K/yr#15th nationally →MassachusettsMedian pay$50KTake-home (after tax)$40KRent (2BR)$2,347/moLeft over after rent$12K/yr#46th nationally →MinnesotaMedian pay$38KTake-home (after tax)$32KRent (2BR)$1,384/moLeft over after rent$15K/yr#41st nationally →New JerseyMedian pay$55KTake-home (after tax)$45KRent (2BR)$2,067/moLeft over after rent$20K/yr#32nd nationally →North CarolinaMedian pay$44KTake-home (after tax)$35KRent (2BR)$1,284/moLeft over after rent$20K/yr#33rd nationally →North DakotaMedian pay$53KTake-home (after tax)$44KRent (2BR)$1,034/moLeft over after rent$32K/yr#5th nationally →OklahomaMedian pay$52KTake-home (after tax)$42KRent (2BR)$1,081/moLeft over after rent$29K/yr#7th nationally →PennsylvaniaMedian pay$34KTake-home (after tax)$29KRent (2BR)$1,351/moLeft over after rent$12K/yr#47th nationally →South DakotaMedian pay$42KTake-home (after tax)$36KRent (2BR)$1,017/moLeft over after rent$24K/yr#20th nationally →TexasMedian pay$34KTake-home (after tax)$29KRent (2BR)$1,415/moLeft over after rent$12K/yr#48th nationally →WyomingMedian pay$40KTake-home (after tax)$34KRent (2BR)$1,008/moLeft over after rent$22K/yr#27th nationally →ConnecticutMedian pay$37KTake-home (after tax)$30KRent (2BR)$1,679/moLeft over after rent$10K/yr#49th nationally →MissouriMedian pay$49KTake-home (after tax)$40KRent (2BR)$1,097/moLeft over after rent$27K/yr#11th nationally →West VirginiaMedian pay$44KTake-home (after tax)$36KRent (2BR)$1,008/moLeft over after rent$24K/yr#21st nationally →IllinoisMedian pay$38KTake-home (after tax)$31KRent (2BR)$1,407/moLeft over after rent$14K/yr#42nd nationally →New MexicoMedian pay$65KTake-home (after tax)$52KRent (2BR)$1,119/moLeft over after rent$38K/yr#4th nationally →ArkansasMedian pay$31KTake-home (after tax)$26KRent (2BR)$1,021/moLeft over after rent$14K/yr#45th nationally →CaliforniaMedian pay$39KTake-home (after tax)$33KRent (2BR)$2,471/moLeft over after rent$3K/yr#51st nationally →DelawareMedian pay$40KTake-home (after tax)$32KRent (2BR)$1,448/moLeft over after rent$15K/yr#40th nationally →District of ColumbiaMedian pay$89KTake-home (after tax)$66KRent (2BR)$2,146/moLeft over after rent$40K/yr#3rd nationally →HawaiiMedian pay$57KTake-home (after tax)$44KRent (2BR)$2,240/moLeft over after rent$17K/yr#39th nationally →IowaMedian pay$38KTake-home (after tax)$31KRent (2BR)$1,064/moLeft over after rent$18K/yr#38th nationally →KentuckyMedian pay$47KTake-home (after tax)$38KRent (2BR)$1,110/moLeft over after rent$24K/yr#19th nationally →MarylandMedian pay$53KTake-home (after tax)$42KRent (2BR)$1,795/moLeft over after rent$21K/yr#29th nationally →MichiganMedian pay$50KTake-home (after tax)$40KRent (2BR)$1,272/moLeft over after rent$25K/yr#16th nationally →MississippiMedian pay$50KTake-home (after tax)$40KRent (2BR)$1,077/moLeft over after rent$27K/yr#10th nationally →MontanaMedian pay$42KTake-home (after tax)$34KRent (2BR)$1,129/moLeft over after rent$21K/yr#30th nationally →New HampshireMedian pay$89KTake-home (after tax)$71KRent (2BR)$1,528/moLeft over after rent$53K/yr#1st nationally →New YorkMedian pay$53KTake-home (after tax)$42KRent (2BR)$1,917/moLeft over after rent$19K/yr#35th nationally →OhioMedian pay$45KTake-home (after tax)$38KRent (2BR)$1,188/moLeft over after rent$23K/yr#22nd nationally →OregonMedian pay$50KTake-home (after tax)$38KRent (2BR)$1,555/moLeft over after rent$19K/yr#36th nationally →TennesseeMedian pay$44KTake-home (after tax)$37KRent (2BR)$1,215/moLeft over after rent$23K/yr#23rd nationally →UtahMedian pay$50KTake-home (after tax)$40KRent (2BR)$1,350/moLeft over after rent$23K/yr#24th nationally →VirginiaMedian pay$35KTake-home (after tax)$29KRent (2BR)$1,646/moLeft over after rent$9K/yr#50th nationally →WashingtonMedian pay$42KTake-home (after tax)$36KRent (2BR)$1,830/moLeft over after rent$14K/yr#43rd nationally →WisconsinMedian pay$58KTake-home (after tax)$46KRent (2BR)$1,202/moLeft over after rent$32K/yr#6th nationally →NebraskaMedian pay$47KTake-home (after tax)$38KRent (2BR)$1,113/moLeft over after rent$25K/yr#17th nationally →South CarolinaMedian pay$44KTake-home (after tax)$36KRent (2BR)$1,263/moLeft over after rent$21K/yr#31st nationally →IdahoMedian pay$47KTake-home (after tax)$38KRent (2BR)$1,136/moLeft over after rent$24K/yr#18th nationally →NevadaMedian pay$55KTake-home (after tax)$46KRent (2BR)$1,501/moLeft over after rent$28K/yr#9th nationally →VermontMedian pay$57KTake-home (after tax)$47KRent (2BR)$1,498/moLeft over after rent$29K/yr#8th nationally →LouisianaMedian pay$44KTake-home (after tax)$36KRent (2BR)$1,191/moLeft over after rent$22K/yr#26th nationally →Rhode IslandMedian pay$55KTake-home (after tax)$44KRent (2BR)$1,544/moLeft over after rent$26K/yr#13th nationally →Annual $ left after rent ($K)$3K$22K (median)$53KSource: BLS OEWS, HUD FMR, federal + state tax brackets · AffordMap.com
View map data as a table
StateMedian (nominal)Rent/mo (2BR)Left after rent
New Hampshire$89K$1,528$53K
Alabama$86K$1,085$52K
District of Columbia$89K$2,146$40K
New Mexico$65K$1,119$38K
North Dakota$53K$1,034$32K
Wisconsin$58K$1,202$32K
Oklahoma$52K$1,081$29K
Vermont$57K$1,498$29K
Nevada$55K$1,501$28K
Mississippi$50K$1,077$27K
Missouri$49K$1,097$27K
Alaska$56K$1,643$27K
Rhode Island$55K$1,544$26K
Indiana$48K$1,144$25K
Maine$50K$1,281$25K
Michigan$50K$1,272$25K
Nebraska$47K$1,113$25K
Idaho$47K$1,136$24K
Kentucky$47K$1,110$24K
South Dakota$42K$1,017$24K
West Virginia$44K$1,008$24K
Ohio$45K$1,188$23K
Tennessee$44K$1,215$23K
Utah$50K$1,350$23K
Arizona$49K$1,437$23K
Louisiana$44K$1,191$22K
Wyoming$40K$1,008$22K
Kansas$42K$1,066$21K
Maryland$53K$1,795$21K
Montana$42K$1,129$21K
South Carolina$44K$1,263$21K
New Jersey$55K$2,067$20K
North Carolina$44K$1,284$20K
Georgia$45K$1,434$19K
New York$53K$1,917$19K
Oregon$50K$1,555$19K
Florida$44K$1,658$18K
Iowa$38K$1,064$18K
Hawaii$57K$2,240$17K
Delaware$40K$1,448$15K
Minnesota$38K$1,384$15K
Illinois$38K$1,407$14K
Washington$42K$1,830$14K
Colorado$44K$1,832$14K
Arkansas$31K$1,021$14K
Massachusetts$50K$2,347$12K
Pennsylvania$34K$1,351$12K
Texas$34K$1,415$12K
Connecticut$37K$1,679$10K
Virginia$35K$1,646$9K
California$39K$2,471$3K

Education and training

Most public safety careers (police officers, firefighters, corrections officers, EMTs) require a high school diploma and completion of a training academy. Police academies run 12-30 weeks depending on the state and department. Fire academies are typically 12-16 weeks. EMT certification can be completed in as little as 6-8 weeks for EMT-Basic, while paramedic certification requires 1-2 years of additional training. A college degree is not required for most entry-level positions but is increasingly preferred by departments and is often required for promotion to supervisory ranks.

Breaking into protective service workers, all other work usually requires High school diploma or equivalent. Hands-on experience through internships, entry-level positions, or structured training complements formal education.

Licensing and certification

Public safety professionals are certified or licensed through state-level commissions (POST commissions for police, state fire marshal offices for firefighters, state EMS boards for EMTs/paramedics). Certification typically requires completing an approved academy, passing written and physical fitness exams, and clearing background investigations. Continuing education and recertification are required on a regular cycle, and standards vary significantly by state.

What the day-to-day looks like

Public safety work involves shift-based schedules (24-on/48-off for firefighters, rotating 8-12 hour shifts for police), physical demands, high-stress situations, and direct public interaction under unpredictable circumstances. The work carries real risk, occupational injuries and mental health impacts are higher than in most civilian careers. The trade-off: strong union protections, excellent pension systems in many jurisdictions, and a sense of purpose and camaraderie that most office jobs can't match.

Career progression

Public safety careers follow rank-based promotion systems: officer → sergeant → lieutenant → captain → chief for police; firefighter → driver/engineer → lieutenant → captain → battalion chief → fire chief for fire service. Promotions are typically based on a combination of time in grade, written exams, assessment centers, and performance evaluations. Each rank increase comes with a defined pay bump per the department's salary schedule. Specialty assignments (detective, arson investigation, SWAT, hazmat) offer variety and sometimes additional pay.

Salary progression

Entry level (0-2 years)
$32K
Early career (2-5 years)
$35K
Mid-career (5-10 years)
$43K
Experienced (10+ years)
$55K
Top earners
$75K

Highest paying states

StateMedian salaryEmployment
New Hampshire$89K90
District of Columbia$89K80
Alabama$86K330
New Mexico$65K650
Wisconsin$58K910
Vermont$57K60
Hawaii$57K110
Alaska$56K400
New Jersey$55K3,520
Nevada$55K910
View all states →

Where the jobs are

The highest-paying state for protective service workers, all others is New Hampshire at $88,960/year, that's $46,420 above the national median. But higher pay often comes with higher costs. Before assuming the top-paying state is the best financial move, check the full affordability breakdown for New Hampshire.

The pay gap between the highest and lowest-paying states is $57,690. That spread sounds dramatic, but cost-of-living differences offset much of it. A protective service workers, all other making $31,270 in Arkansas may have more purchasing power than one making $88,960 in New Hampshire if rent and local prices differ enough.

By employment volume, the states with the most protective service workers, all other jobs are California (26,360 workers), Pennsylvania (5,720 workers), Colorado (4,640 workers). High employment numbers mean more job openings, more employer competition for talent, and usually more leverage when negotiating salary. States with fewer workers in the field may pay less but also have less competition for positions.

For the full state-by-state comparison with salary percentiles, cost-of-living adjustment, and rent affordability for protective service workers, all others, see the complete salary data page.

Salary negotiation

Public safety salaries are almost always set by collective bargaining agreements or civil service pay scales, individual negotiation is limited. The levers that exist: choosing a higher-paying department (neighboring jurisdictions can vary by $10K-$20K for the same rank), pursuing specialty assignments with premium pay, maximizing overtime opportunities, and achieving rank promotions through exam preparation.

What the data doesn't tell you

BLS salary data for public safety occupations significantly underreports total compensation. Overtime is endemic in police and fire work, pension contributions (often 20-30% of salary, employer-paid) aren't reflected in the wage figure, and many departments offer healthcare coverage that continues into retirement. A police officer with a reported $65K salary and a full benefits package may have a total compensation value of $95K-$110K.

See the full salary picture

Percentile breakdown, cost of living, rent burden, and purchasing power for protective service workers, all others in every metro.

View Protective Service Workers, All Other salaries →
View jobs for Protective Service Workers, All Other
Currently hiring in nationwide
View →
More openings for Protective Service Workers, All Other
Currently hiring in nationwide
View →
Build skills for your next move
Explore courses and certificates related to your role
View →
Calculate your take-home pay
See what this salary means after taxes
Calculate →
Best cities for this career by take-home pay
Disposable-income rankings (median pay minus taxes minus rent), from BLS, HUD, and tax data
Explore →

Frequently asked questions

How much does a protective service workers, all other make?

The median protective service workers, all other salary in the United States is $42,540 per year ($20/hour). Entry-level positions start around $32,470, while experienced professionals earn up to $74,590.

What education do you need to become a protective service workers, all other?

Most protective service workers, all other positions require High school diploma or equivalent. Requirements vary by state and employer. Check with your state's licensing board for specific requirements.

What is the job outlook for protective service workers, all others?

Check the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook for the latest employment projections for protective service workers, all others.

What are the highest paying states for protective service workers, all others?

The highest paying states for protective service workers, all others are New Hampshire ($88,960), District of Columbia ($88,570), Alabama ($86,350), New Mexico ($64,940), Wisconsin ($57,620). Salaries vary significantly by location due to cost of living and local demand.