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TX — DALLAS-FORT WORTH-ARLINGTON, TX

Elevator Mechanic apprenticeships in Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX

Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX is the 4th-most populous metro in the US. Here is what working as an elevator mechanic looks like locally.

Updated May 25, 2026

KEY FACTS — DALLAS-FORT WORTH-ARLINGTON, TX

Dallas: ~145 of 430 (~34%) (small denominator) · market pressure 64/100 — High pressure.

Elevator Mechanic earning $100K+ annually in Dallas
~145 of 430 (~34%) ±51

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; small denominator — treat as directional).

OEWS six-figure baseline (elevator mechanic)
~323 of 430 (~75%)

Confidence: high. Our six-figure estimator uses a $115k review threshold; cells where the published p90 reaches that threshold are flagged for conservative upper-tail extrapolation.

Source: BLS OEWS.

Market pressure score (elevator mechanic, Dallas)
64/100 — High pressure

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.

Bachelor’s+ in the Dallas labor force
1.88M

Source: Census ACS 2022 5-year.

Competitive ratio ($100K+ earners / bachelor’s+)
77.1 per 1M

A framing, not a forecast. See methodology.

Numerator: ACS PUMS $100K+ annual earners.

Auto-compiled from Texas editorial + Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX labor data. Spot an error?

Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX carries a working sponsor stack for elevator mechanics in Texas. Metro-level OEWS for elevator mechanics here is suppressed. The statewide median is the honest reference until BLS publishes the next ingestion.

This page collects what an adult switching into the trade needs first: where the work is, who runs the apprenticeships, which schools feed the ladder, what public-sector contracts back the next 18 months, and what licensing actually requires.

Verify each named institution before you bet a year of household income on its application calendar. Sponsor lists shift faster than search engines refresh.

Metro-level OEWS pay bands are not interpolated for Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX on this page. The statewide Texas pay snapshot is the honest reference. Apprentice scale is published on the local hall page.

To verify your specific zip, look up the local apprenticeship-page wage table. Or unionpayscales.com for IBEW work. That is the published apprentice scale, not an aggregate. Year-one pay rarely covers a household budget on its own. The math gets better fast by year two.

Cost-of-living differences between this metro and the rest of Texas matter more than the headline wage. The first 12-18 months are tight regardless of metro. What changes is whether year-three journeyman scale clears your local rent number.

The sponsor stack for elevator mechanics in Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX centers on IUEC Local 21 (Dallas Elevator Constructors) (International Union of Elevator Constructors Local 21 covers…), National Elevator Industry Educational Program (NEIEP) (Joint labor-management educational trust funded by IUEC and …). Expect waitlists. Locals only let in as many apprentices as their contractors can absorb.

Registered apprenticeship sponsors named on the federal RAP database for this metro include Elevator World / National Association of Elevator Contractors (NAEC), Elevator Industry Work Preservation Fund (EIWPF), ElevatorInfo / IUEC outreach. Sponsor lists shift between application windows. Verify the current intake before you build a calendar around it.

Adults applying without a referral usually wait one application cycle longer than insiders do. The math still works. The timeline is honest.

Schools that historically feed the elevator mechanic ladder in or near Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX: NEIEP Apprenticeship — IUEC Local 21 — Four-to-five-year elevator constructor apprenticeship / 2,000 supervised hours per calendar year plus 100-200 classroom hours; Schindler Dallas Technical Learning Center — Schindler in-house technician training center for the Americas / Focused on modernization and field-service curricula; Tarrant County College and Dallas College — supporting electrical / mechanical pathways — Electrical Technology AAS / HVAC Technology AAS — both feed pre-apprentice candidates for elevator work.

That is 3 candidate programs surfaced inside the metro commute radius. Verify each one's current enrollment cycle, prerequisite math placement, and whether evening or weekend cohorts are running for working adults.

Tuition, placement rates, and JATC-credit transfer vary year to year. Call the placement office before you enroll. Ask specifically whether classroom hours count toward the related-instruction requirement of a registered apprenticeship in this state. The wrong answer is "we think so." The right answer is a written articulation agreement.

Two-year associate programs are the most common path. A few employers will reimburse tuition once you are hired, which changes the math when household savings are tight. Some programs partner with the local sponsor directly, so completion of the certificate counts as credited related-instruction hours.

Major Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX employers that hire elevator mechanics: Otis Elevator (DFW operations) (Largest elevator OEM; new construction, maintenance, and modernization across DFW commercial and residential portfolios), Schindler Elevator Corporation (Dallas branch) (Major OEM with the Dallas Technical Learning Center; servicing Otis, KONE, ThyssenKrupp, and Schindler equipment across DFW), KONE Elevators & Escalators (DFW Metroplex branch — Coppell) (Design, manufacturing, installation, maintenance, and repair across the DFW Metroplex), TK Elevator (formerly ThyssenKrupp) — DFW (OEM and service provider; new construction installs and modernization on commercial portfolios), Hines (Victory Avenue 28-story tower) and other DFW high-rise developers (Active DFW high-rise pipeline through 2026 sustaining new-construction elevator installs), Major DFW healthcare systems (Baylor Scott & White, UT Southwestern, Texas Health Resources) (Recurring hospital elevator install and modernization scope across patient towers and ambulatory campuses). Verify openings on the employer career pages directly. Aggregator postings lag.

Each named employer above hires through a different intake channel. Some pull through registered apprenticeship sponsors. Others cycle journeyman hires through direct postings. A few work exclusively with prime contractors that subcontract scope by phase. Match the channel to your stage.

The metro favors specific sub-specialties depending on its industry mix. Commercial high-rise versus residential service. Industrial process versus light commercial. Healthcare build-out versus hospitality fit-out. Pull three current job postings in your zip code before assuming the local mix matches your prior experience.

Sub-specialty matters because tools, certifications, and shift schedules change. Industrial work runs day-shift with predictable hours. Service work runs on-call with overtime spikes. Commercial new-construction work runs by phase, with hiring waves three months ahead of each milestone.

Public-sector projects feeding elevator mechanic demand around Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX include Dallas Fort Worth International Airport: Terminal F vertical-transport build — passenger elevators, escalators, and moving walks under the Innovation Next+ JV ($855M concourse award; vertical-transport sub-scope inside the program), Dallas Area Rapid Transit (DART) and TEXRail: Station vertical transport — modernization and new-station installs across DART rail and TEXRail commuter line (Multi-hundred-million capital plan rolling through the late 2020s), and Dallas Convention Center / Kay Bailey Hutchison expansion: Convention center master plan — vertical transport for new exhibit halls and connectors ($3B+ master plan in design / phasing).

These contracts pull subcontractor crews, including journeyman elevator mechanics, from a 60-mile radius once construction phases lock in. Watch prime contractor announcements. The trade flow ramps about three months after award.

The honest read on Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX for this trade: Strong. Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX carries the full sponsor / school / employer stack a switching adult needs to plan around: 2 local unions sponsoring apprenticeship work; 3 accredited training programs in commute range; 3 registered apprenticeship sponsors.

Demand signals worth weighing: 2 local unions sponsoring apprenticeship work, 3 accredited training programs in commute range, 3 registered apprenticeship sponsors, 6+ named employers hiring in the trade.

Licensing in Texas: Texas regulates elevator industry through TDLR — elevator contractors must carry general liability insurance of at least $1,000,000 per occurrence bodily injury / death and $500,000 per occurrence property damage; registered elevator contractors must submit detailed plans before any installation or alteration; registered elevator inspectors must complete a mandatory free virtual training to renew.

Verify with the state board before you apply, pay tuition, or accept a sponsor's claim. Rules change between sessions. A six-month-old version of this paragraph is already stale somewhere. The board is the authority. This page is a starting point.

Tooling for the elevator mechanic ladder in Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX starts modest and compounds. Year-one essentials: a complete trade-specific tool kit verified against the local sponsor program list.

Certifications stack on top. Plan for OSHA 10, plus the trade-specific safety certifications your sponsor requires. Budget $800 to $2,500 for year-one tools and required certifications. Tools depreciate fast on a service truck. Buy quality once where it matters and accept that the apprentice-pouch ones will get lost or stolen by year three.

Survival math for adults switching at 32, 38, 45 with a household in Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX comes down to three honest questions. Can your partner or roommate cover fixed costs for 12-18 months while year-one pay ramps? Do you have six months of liquid savings sitting in a separate account, ready for the slow weeks? Do you have a side income that bridges the gap?

None of these is a moral requirement. They are the patterns that show up across every adult elevator mechanic apprentice who actually finishes the program. The ones who wash out at month nine almost always missed at least two of the three. Run the dollar figures before you sit the aptitude test. Not after.

Adjacent labor markets matter when the Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX sponsor calendar is closed. Many adult applicants spend six months commuting into a neighboring metro for related-instruction classroom hours, then transfer once the local intake reopens.

Look at the nearest larger MSA on the parent state programs page for backup sponsor stacks. The application math improves substantially when you can credibly commit to two intake windows in different commute radii. Sponsors notice. Adult elevator mechanic applicants who run two parallel applications usually land six months sooner than the single-application crowd.

Three concrete moves this week. Pull the parent Texas Elevator Mechanic programs page and note the next application window for any local sponsor named above. Write down your survival number, the actual monthly dollar figure your household needs to clear. Call one named school's placement office and ask for last year's outcome data.

Date them. Day 30: math refresh complete. Day 60: applications submitted. Day 90: aptitude test sat. The deeper playbook is in the Elevator Mechanic switch brief.

You don't have to be in your 20s to make this work. Keep showing up, refresh the algebra, treat the application window like a deadline. Bring documentation: high school transcript, valid driver license, social security card, military discharge papers when applicable. Wear a collared shirt to the interview. Show ten minutes early. Skip the cologne.

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. 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.

VERIFIED ROUTE COVERAGE — DALLAS-FORT WORTH-ARLINGTON, TX

This public local packet uses only the 2026 research-corpus facts that still have live quote support. It is meant to make the Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX 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 Texas authority before a reader makes an enrollment, tuition, tool, commute, or resignation decision.

IUEC Local 21 (Dallas/Ft. Worth) covers this CBSA per the IUEC Local Union Directory, with NEIEP administering the 4-5 year apprenticeship. One verified union, two verified training entities (Local training site plus NEIEP), and one national OEM employer (Otis) meet the Viable rule. Additional OEM rows (KONE, Schindler, TK Elevator) with metro-specific addresses were not separately verified at first-party level in this pass, so the verdict does not reach Strong under the strict counting rule (employers>=3).

For an adult comparing elevator mechanic options in Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX, 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.

Demand signals reviewed

  • IUEC Local 21 (Dallas/Ft. Worth) is the named elevator-constructors local in the IUEC official directory (revised 2023-03-23).
  • NEIEP runs a 4-5 year registered apprenticeship with 2,000 supervised work hours per year and 100-200 class hours per year for all IUEC locals.

Known limits to verify

  • No metro-specific OEM branch (Otis/KONE/Schindler/TK Elevator) address was directly verified from a first-party employer page in this pass; tradeRelevantEmployers left empty rather than guess.
  • The IUEC directory PDF is dated 2023-03-23; while the locals and addresses are likely current, more recent local websites should be reverified before publication.
  • Local jurisdiction boundaries (e.g. which counties exactly fall under each Local) are not always spelled out in the directory; metro-to-Local mapping is based on city headquarters.
  • IUEC Local Union Directory PDF (iuec.org, revised 2023-03-23) is the primary first-party source for the union row; the PDF date is older than 24 months so confirm against local-union websites before publish.
  • No YouTube channels for IUEC Local or NEIEP were verified for identity in this pass; youtubeReferences left empty rather than guess.
International Union of Elevator Constructors (IUEC) IUEC Local 21 (Dallas/Ft. Worth) IUEC Local 21 Training (NEIEP-administered) National Elevator Industry Educational Program (NEIEP) Otis Worldwide Corporation (US service operations)

Research kit 2026-05-25; live quote-supported public facts only.

UNION APPRENTICESHIP PROGRAMS

Union apprenticeship programs in Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX

Verified elevator mechanic union locals with public-facing city, jurisdiction, training, and official-site details.

IUEC Local 79 HQ: North Little Rock, AR

IUEC Local 79 Little Rock, AR

Jurisdiction:Arkansas, Ashley, Baxter, Benton, Boone + 69 more counties (AR/LA/TX)

Training:National Elevator Industry Educational Program - Local 79 Apprenticeship (North Little Rock, AR)

Official site →
IUEC Local 131 HQ: Albuquerque, NM

IUEC Local 131

Jurisdiction:Archuleta, La Plata, Montezuma counties (CO/NM/TX)

Training:National Elevator Industry Educational Program (NEIEP) - Region 19 / Albuquerque and El Paso classroom sites (Albuquerque, NM)

Official site →

Verified-source check recorded in the union dataset; this data snapshot does not carry per-local verification dates.

Street addresses, phone numbers, and emails stay out of the page source. Open the free directory for addresses & phone numbers .

ELEVATOR MECHANIC PAY SNAPSHOT — DALLAS-FORT WORTH-ARLINGTON, TX

$104,470 (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 Texas

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