Data Center Technician apprenticeships in St. Louis, MO-IL
St. Louis, MO-IL is the 20th-most populous metro in the US. Here is what working as a data center technician looks like locally.
KEY FACTS — ST. LOUIS, MO-IL
St. Louis: ~36 of 630 (~5.7%) · market pressure 19/100 — Very low pressure.
Confidence: low. Annual labor earnings (W-2 wages + self-employment), not OEWS hourly-wage extrapolations.
Source: Census ACS 2024 5-year PUMS (state-rate projection onto metro OEWS employment).
Source: BLS OEWS.
Confidence: low. Composite of projected annual openings, projected growth, and current $100K+ earnings rate. Not a direct vacancy count.
Source: Projections Central data; score computed by Prentice.
Source: Census ACS 2022 5-year.
A framing, not a forecast. See methodology.
Numerator: ACS PUMS $100K+ annual earners.
St. Louis, MO-IL is one of Missouri's largest labor markets for data center technicians. It is the 20th-largest metro area in the United States by population. This page collects what adults switching into a career as a data center technician inside the St. Louis metro need first: how local pay compares to the state, what the available labor-market data says about six-figure work, and which statewide programs and licensing rules apply locally.
St. Louis, MO-IL data center technicians earn a median of $43,670 (BLS OEWS St. Louis MSA, May 2024). For Missouri context, statewide pay runs from $20/hr at entry to $32/hr at the state median and $48/hr at the experienced end. Statewide headline: $67K avg salary. The St. Louis metro is a top-50 U.S. MSA; local wages may run above or below the state median depending on sector mix.
Metro-level six-figure data center technician counts for the St. Louis metro are not yet published; the estimate is suppressed or pending ingestion. ACS 2024 5-year PUMS estimates ~36 $100K+ annual earners (~5.7% of employed data center technicians, ACS PUMS WAGP+SEMP). Projections Central long-term pressure score: 19/100 (Very low, low confidence). Bachelor's-plus in the metro labor force: 719K (ACS 2022 5-year). Sources: BLS OEWS, Census ACS PUMS, Projections Central, Census ACS.
Statewide data center technician programs and employer-sponsored paths are listed on the Missouri programs page; none are flagged as metro-exclusive. Metro program and association references are inherited from sourced state pages unless a metro-exclusive entity is explicitly sourced. Treat them as orientation, not a complete local inventory, and verify current intake details with the statewide source or sponsor before relying. Licensing is set at the state level: Missouri rules apply in the St. Louis metro unless a local authority says otherwise. Metro pages use state-level licensing and program context unless a city, county, or sponsor rule is explicitly sourced. Verify current licensing, local add-ons, and sponsor requirements with the official state or local authority before relying. Use the current route links on this page to verify each option's application location, classroom location, worksite geography, assignment or dispatch rules, and required start-time commute. The metro label does not prove a travel radius, current intake, or local eligibility.
VERIFIED ROUTE COVERAGE — ST. LOUIS, MO-IL
This public local packet uses only the 2026 research-corpus facts that still have live quote support. It is meant to make the St. Louis, MO-IL page useful without treating the research kit as a paid guide: the source-backed items below identify real local anchors, the unresolved limits stay visible, and the statewide licensing context still has to be verified with the official Missouri authority before a reader makes an enrollment, tuition, tool, commute, or resignation decision.
St. Louis has a documented operating H5 facility, a city-permitted future project with explicit job and local-hiring conditions, a current STLCC networking certificate, and official state apprenticeship-search routes. Together they support an actionable operator, project-watch, school, and sponsor search. They do not establish a current local data-center opening or apprenticeship seat.
For an adult comparing data center technician options in St. Louis, MO-IL, the practical question is not just whether the occupation exists. The useful check is whether there is a reachable sponsor, school, employer, agency, or association that can confirm current intake windows, minimum age, diploma or GED requirements, license prerequisites, background screens, physical expectations, drug-testing rules, classroom credit, wage progression, tool ownership, transportation demands, and the first realistic paid work date. That is why this free page keeps the local evidence trail public while reserving the deeper paid bundle for exact application planning only after trace and delivery proof pass.
A strong call or email record should answer plain questions before anyone commits money or quits a job: who signs the apprenticeship agreement, whether probationary periods count toward completion, which coordinator tracks work-process hours, how classroom attendance is documented, whether night classes or hybrid instruction are available, what happens after a failed exam, which fees are refundable, how layoffs affect standing, whether prior military, college, pre-apprenticeship, OSHA, CPR, commercial-driver, bilingual, childcare, math, welding, safety, computer, customer-service, or shop experience changes placement, and which documents must be uploaded before an interview. Those details are local, perishable, and often hidden in phone calls, so Prentice treats them as verification tasks rather than evergreen promises.
Use the packet like a verification worksheet: scan the entity names, then confirm address, sponsor number, intake season, eligibility screen, fee schedule, wage-step policy, instructor contact, completion credential, transfer rules, complaint channel, board citation, public roster status, apprenticeship agreement language, cancellation terms, and the person responsible for updating applicants when a deadline moves. A page is useful for search only when those prompts are visible enough that a reader can challenge the summary instead of trusting polished copy.
In practice, separate four signals before ranking options: a confirmed training provider, a named employer or sponsor, a state or local agency that recognizes the path, and a recent contact who can explain the next intake step. If one signal is missing, keep searching; if two are missing, treat the opportunity as early research until a school adviser, apprenticeship coordinator, workforce board, union office, shop manager, or licensing clerk can put current instructions in writing. Also record who answered, the date, the exact program name, whether the answer came from admissions, workforce development, human resources, a journeyperson, or an owner, and which detail still needs a primary-source link.
Local verification checklist
- Confirm whether each named program or employer is currently accepting entry-level candidates.
- Ask whether classroom hours, supervised work hours, or prior trade-school credits transfer.
- Check whether the commute, shift start, parking, vehicle access, and weekend rules fit your household.
- Verify the state licensing path, exam sequence, renewal rules, and local add-ons with the authority.
- Compare first-paycheck timing against savings, childcare, health insurance, and existing debt.
- Keep notes from calls, emails, open houses, interviews, and sponsor conversations in one dated file.
What this page does not claim
It does not promise that every listed organization has an open apprenticeship seat today, that every employer sponsors formal registered apprenticeship training, or that wages, tuition, tool costs, or admissions calendars have stayed unchanged since the research snapshot. Treat this as a local evidence starting point, then verify the current rule with the agency, sponsor, school, union, contractor, or employer before acting.
- H5 Data Centers describes its St. Louis site as a 36,000-square-foot facility in the Globe Building with access to 10 communications carriers. h5datacenters.com
- H5 lists N+1 UPS power for its St. Louis facility. h5datacenters.com
- St. Louis Community College publishes a 15-credit Cisco Networking Academy CCNA Certificate of Specialization. catalog.stlcc.edu
Demand signals reviewed
- H5 documents an operating 36,000-square-foot St. Louis facility with carrier and critical-infrastructure features.
- The City of St. Louis documents a permitted future data-center project with job floors and First-Source priority.
- STLCC publishes a Forest Park CCNA certificate, and Apprenticeship Missouri publishes official search routes.
Known limits to verify
- No current local data-center technician vacancy or apprenticeship seat was verified.
- The Armory project is a future-demand signal with a 2028 target, not current hiring.
- The city article's 200-job total includes separate office redevelopment, so this packet uses only the explicit data-center job floors.
- No current local data-center technician vacancy or apprenticeship seat was verified on 2026-07-13.
- The city's 200-job figure includes 150 office jobs at the Armory; only the separately stated data-center job floors are used here.
Research kit 2026-05-25; live quote-supported public facts only.
DATA CENTER TECHNICIAN PAY SNAPSHOT — ST. LOUIS, MO-IL
$43,670 (OEWS MSA-level median)
Source: BLS OEWS MSA cross-industry estimates. Where MSA-level data is suppressed or unpublished we fall back to the state median and label it explicitly.
Programs across Missouri
We list data center technician apprenticeships, schools, and locals statewide.
DATA CENTER TECHNICIAN IN NEARBY METROS
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GET THE ST. LOUIS, MO-IL GUIDE — $39
Use the local data center technician guide for application planning, source-backed local options, and next actions in St. Louis, MO-IL.