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Salary comparison

Agricultural Technicians vs. Occupational Health and Safety Specialists: Who Earns More?

Occupational Health and Safety Specialists out-earn Agricultural Technicians by $41K a year at the national median, per BLS OEWS May 2025. Agricultural Technicians land at $49,630 and Occupational Health and Safety Specialists at $90,150. The education gap is real: agricultural technician programs typically require bachelor's degree, while occupational health and safety specialist programs require bachelor's degree. Top-paying state for Agricultural Technicians is Iowa ($64,070); for Occupational Health and Safety Specialists it's District of Columbia ($111,530).

Agricultural Technicians
Occupational Health and Safety Specialists
Median salary
$49,630
$90,150
Hourly rate
$23.86/hr
$43.34/hr
Entry level (10th %)
$35,980
$55,000
Senior level (90th %)
$76,480
$134,950
Education required
Bachelor's degree
Bachelor's degree
U.S. employment
15,130
140,610
Job growth (10-year)
4.3%
12.5%
Category
Science
Science
Top-paying state
Iowa
District of Columbia

Pay by state

States where both occupations have BLS data, sorted by Agricultural Technicians median pay.

State
Agricultural Technicians
Occupational Health and Safety Specialists
Wyoming
$63,120
$94,030
California
$60,320
$102,840
Minnesota
$57,310
$96,990
Maryland
$49,680
$91,820
Washington
$48,220
$102,920
Hawaii
$47,960
$94,840
Maine
$47,410
$97,640
Colorado
$47,020
$101,400
North Dakota
$46,960
$93,250
Oregon
$46,800
$95,240
Illinois
$46,410
$98,270
New York
$45,830
$95,720
Nevada
$43,590
$94,360
New Hampshire
$42,520
$101,260
Virginia
$41,210
$90,800

Source: BLS OEWS May 2025. Highlighted value is higher in each row.

Common questions

Who earns more, Agricultural Technicians or Occupational Health and Safety Specialists?

Occupational Health and Safety Specialists earn more nationally. The median is $49,630 for Agricultural Technicians versus $90,150 for Occupational Health and Safety Specialists, a difference of $41K. Per BLS OEWS May 2025.

Which has better job growth, Agricultural Technicians or Occupational Health and Safety Specialists?

Occupational Health and Safety Specialists has the better 10-year outlook at 12.5% projected growth, compared to 4.3% for the other field. Both are from BLS Employment Projections.

Which requires more education, Agricultural Technicians or Occupational Health and Safety Specialists?

Agricultural Technicians typically requires bachelor's degree. Occupational Health and Safety Specialists requires bachelor's degree. Education requirements vary by employer and state licensing board.

Where do Agricultural Technicians get paid the most?

Iowa is the top-paying state for Agricultural Technicians at $64,070/year, per BLS OEWS May 2025. Major metro areas within that state typically pay even more than the state average.

How does Agricultural Technicians vs. Occupational Health and Safety Specialists pay differ by state?

The gap varies significantly by state. In Wyoming, Agricultural Technicians earn $63,120 vs. $94,030 for Occupational Health and Safety Specialists. See the state comparison table on this page for the full picture.

Full Agricultural Technicians salary breakdownView →Full Occupational Health and Safety Specialists salary breakdownView →Best cities for Agricultural Technicians by take-home payExplore →Best cities for Occupational Health and Safety Specialists by take-home payExplore →How to become a agricultural techniciansGuide →How to become a occupational health and safety specialistsGuide →