ND — ND 2026 Guide

How to Become a Welder in North Dakota

How much you'll actually make as a welder in North Dakota, how the AWS certifications stack up, who runs the apprenticeships and welding schools near you, and the route adults actually take into the trade. No sugar-coating.

$52K avg salary |4+ programs |Updated March 23, 2026
KEY FACTS — NORTH DAKOTA
+ Year-one welder pay in North Dakota runs $16-$20/hr — about $33k-$42k a year — and union scales are publicly posted on most local pages. Verify your local on unionpayscales.com.
+ North Dakota runs roughly 4+ welder training paths across union apprenticeships (UA Local 300, Iron Workers Local 793, Boilermakers Local 647), community-college welding programs (Bismarck State College and others), AWS-aligned bootcamps, and direct-employer pipelines. NCCER curriculum is the most commonly recognized standard.
+ Apprenticeships and welding programs run 2-4 years, with the AWS Certified Welder (CW) test as the typical entry credential. You're on the payroll the whole way through a registered apprenticeship — paid apprenticeship, not paid school.
+ North Dakota has no statewide welder license. The credential that decides your pay is which AWS test you can pass: D1.1 for structural steel, D1.5 for bridges, ASME Section IX for pressure vessels, API 1104 for cross-country pipeline. Each test is process-and-position-specific.
+ Employment growth is projected at 11.6% over the next decade — verify the current OEWS and Projections Central pages on bls.gov before you make decisions. North Dakota's mix runs oil and gas, pipeline, ag equipment, wind.
+ Experienced AWS-certified welder pay tops out around $40-$48/hr in major North Dakota metros — pipe welders on shutdown weeks, aerospace D17.1 welders, and underwater commercial divers stack overtime and per-diem on top of that scale.
+ North Dakota is affordable everywhere except Williston, where Bakken-era housing pricing still lingers. Pipeline rig welders here can clear six figures fast — but the work is seasonal, weather-driven, and lives out of a truck. Run the survival number for your specific zip before you apply.
+ Welders graduate without college debt — but the kit is real. A Lincoln Electric or Miller machine ($800-$2,500 used to start), an auto-darkening helmet (Lincoln Viking 3350 or Speedglas, $200-$400), filler metals (E7018 stick, ER70S-6 MIG wire, ER308L for stainless), a 4.5" angle grinder, and PPE add up. Budget $800-$3,000 for year one.

What you'll actually earn in North Dakota

Pay in North Dakota, in actual numbers, looks like this:

  • Year-one welder / apprentice: $16-$20/hr — roughly $33k-$42k annually at 40 hours, more if your shop runs steady overtime or your shutdown weeks stack up.
  • Mid-career / journeyman: $23-$31/hr — about $48k-$64k annually, often with health and pension benefits if you're on a union ticket.
  • Experienced AWS-certified / specialty welder: $40-$48/hr — $83k-$100k annually before per-diem, overtime, and shutdown bonuses. Pipe welders on Gulf Coast turnarounds, aerospace D17.1 welders, and underwater divers regularly clear more.

These are scales for North Dakota union locals and AWS-certified merit-shop welders. Verify your specific zip on unionpayscales.com — sort by city, state, and trade. The site is free.

Non-union shops typically pay 70-85% of union scale, with smaller benefits. That can still work for adults — sometimes faster entry beats a higher long-term ceiling — but you have to know the trade-off going in. The other variable is which AWS test you can pass cleanly. A welder with a current 6G pipe ticket and a 3G stainless ticket walks into shutdowns at premium rates everywhere.

The certification clock

Welder pay in North Dakota is cert-driven, not calendar-driven. The baseline is the AWS Certified Welder (CW) test — passed on a process and position your shop runs.

From there, the certifications that actually move your pay are:

  • AWS D1.1 Structural Steel — the baseline for any structural welder. Tested at AWS-accredited facilities; renews on continuity.
  • AWS D1.5 Bridge Welding — required for state DOT and federal bridge work. The harder test pays the premium.
  • ASME Section IX — for pressure vessels, boilers, and petrochemical piping. The Boilermakers locals run this work.
  • API 1104 — cross-country pipeline. Rig welders live on this ticket. The 6G position test is the one that actually decides who's on the rig.
  • AWS D17.1 Aerospace — the precision tier. D17.1 welders in Boeing, Lockheed, Northrop, and Spirit shops pull premium pay with overtime.

You can't fake a weld test. The coupon is cut, etched, bent, and broken. Either your fusion holds or it doesn't. That's the floor of the whole trade. Apprenticeships compress your training; bootcamps shorten it; community colleges spread it across two years — but the test is the same.

Is North Dakota a strong welding market?

North Dakota's mix is Bakken oil and gas pipeline and pipe work (the densest rig-welding market in the upper Midwest), ag-equipment fabrication, and the ongoing wind-tower and rail-car fabrication that travels across the state. Continental Resources, Hess Bakken, Marathon Petroleum Mandan refinery, Bobcat Company West Fargo are the names you'll hear most on local crews.

Strong locally means three things at once: multiple shops or projects within commute, a wage scale that beats your survival number, and an AWS-aligned training path you can actually start without moving.

North Dakota is affordable everywhere except Williston, where Bakken-era housing pricing still lingers. Pipeline rig welders here can clear six figures fast — but the work is seasonal, weather-driven, and lives out of a truck. Pull up your monthly survival number — rent, food, transport, debt minimums, insurance, childcare — and stack it against a worst-case month-1 take-home. Then decide.

The routes into welding in North Dakota

  • Union apprenticeship. Welders are spread across multiple unions in North Dakota — Iron Workers (structural), UA (pipe), Boilermakers (pressure vessels, refinery shutdowns), SMW (sheet metal). The headline locals here are UA Local 300, Iron Workers Local 793, Boilermakers Local 647. Strong long-term comp, NCCER-aligned curriculum, and waitlists you should plan around.
  • Community-college welding program. Bismarck State College and other North Dakota community colleges run 1-2 year welding programs that put you in front of an AWS test by graduation. Tuition varies; ask the placement office for current AWS pass rates and employer pipelines by name.
  • AWS-aligned bootcamp. Tulsa Welding School, Lincoln Tech, and a handful of regional welding schools compress training into 7-10 months. The price tag is real ($15-$25k typically), and the credential is the same AWS test. The bootcamps work for adults who can't wait on a union waitlist and have the cash or financing lined up. Verify employer placement rates with current graduates, not with the admissions office.
  • Military veteran cert path. If you ran welding in the Navy hull-tech, Seabees, Army 91E, or Marine Corps welding rate, you arrive in North Dakota with hours that often credit toward an apprenticeship. Boeing's Honda program and defense contractors actively recruit veteran welders. Walk into your local with your DD-214 and ask about credit; don't assume.
  • Direct shop / helper. A small fab shop will hire a green helper for $14-$17/hr and train you on the floor. Quick income, real exposure. The trap is that helper hours don't count toward AWS unless you're actively taking the test. If the shop won't sponsor your AWS attempt, document everything and use the gig as a bridge to a real program.

AWS certification in North Dakota

There is no statewide welder license in North Dakota. What employers and job-site GCs ask for is your AWS card — process, position, and material specific.

The path most adults take:

  1. Train through a community college, apprenticeship, bootcamp, or direct-shop program.
  2. Pass the AWS Certified Welder (CW) test on a process — SMAW (stick), GMAW (MIG), GTAW (TIG), FCAW (flux core), or SAW — at an AWS-accredited test facility in North Dakota.
  3. Stack the certs that actually pay: D1.1 (structural), D1.5 (bridge), ASME IX (pressure vessel), API 1104 (pipeline), D17.1 (aerospace).
  4. Maintain continuity. Most AWS certs renew on a 6-month log of welding in the qualified process — your shop signs the form. Lapse the log, retest.
  5. Add OSHA 10 first, OSHA 30 by year two if your contractor pays for it. Some specialty work also requires fall protection, confined space, and respirator-fit credentials.

Verify with the official authority: AWS test fees, accredited test-facility lists, and any state-or-job-site-specific welder qualifications change. Treat this page as a starting point, then verify current AWS test requirements with aws.org and your apprenticeship sponsor or community-college program before you pay tuition or accept a placement claim.

How to apply (the actual sequence)

  1. Pick your route first. Pull the local union pages for your commute radius — UA Local 300, Iron Workers Local 793, Boilermakers Local 647 are the major locals in North Dakota. Pull the Bismarck State College welding program page. Pull the nearest AWS-accredited test facility list from aws.org. Three doors, one trade.
  2. Check eligibility basics: high school diploma or GED, valid North Dakota driver's license, ability to pass a drug screen, age 18+, the ability to lift 50+ lbs, and decent eyesight (corrected is fine; auto-darkening helmets do most of the work). Color vision matters more than you'd think — heat tint on stainless tells you everything.
  3. Refresh basic math. Apprenticeship aptitude tests cover arithmetic, fractions (you'll use them daily on every plate-thickness call), basic algebra, and reading comprehension. Two weeks of focused review on fractions, ratios, and word problems clears most adults out of school for years.
  4. Document everything. Bring driver's license, social security card, high school transcript or GED, DD-214 if you served, and any prior welding or fabrication documentation to the interview. If you've welded a fence panel in your driveway, take a photo and bring it. Specifics earn the seat.
  5. Get under a hood. Before you commit, spend ten hours at a community-college welding lab or a friend's shop. The work either fits you or it doesn't. Hood time is the cheapest test you can run on yourself.

The lifestyle reality in North Dakota

The work is real work. Sparks. Arc flash. Slag. UV burn through any seam in your jacket. Fume extraction matters; the shop that doesn't run a fan is the shop that gives you metal-fume fever by month three.

Hood time stacks up. Eight hours of stick welding with a 1/15 second flicker between each puddle and arc strike is a different kind of tired than office work. Your neck and shoulders run sore for the first two months. Your forearms catch up by month four. Knees take longer.

Outside of Fargo and the major metros, the jobs travel. Pipeline rig welders live out of a truck. Shutdown welders live out of motels for two-week stretches at premium per-diem. Shop welders punch a clock and go home; their ceiling is lower but their life is more predictable. Pick the lane your household can absorb.

It also branches further than most adults realize. After your AWS card, you can stay structural, push into pipe, specialize in stainless and exotic alloys for food-and-pharma plants, move into pressure-vessel work, run aerospace D17.1, run underwater commercial dive welding, eventually run a shop or rig your own. The first year picks the floor. The certs you stack pick the ceiling.

Switching at 35, 40, 45 with hand-eye demands

Year-one welder pay in North Dakota will probably be a step backward if you're leaving a salaried office job. That's the honest version. The math gets better fast — by year two most welders clear a meaningful raise, and once you've got two AWS tickets stacked you're in the journeyman band — but the first 12-18 months are tight.

Hand-eye is the variable nobody tells adult switchers about specifically. Stick welding rewards a steady hand and the patience to read a puddle. TIG punishes everything that isn't both.

If you played a sport, played guitar, or ran fine motor work in a previous trade, you'll catch up faster than you think. If your only screen for thirty years has been a keyboard, the first month under the hood feels clumsy. That's normal — keep showing up and the muscle memory builds.

Adults who survive the switch usually have one of three things: a working partner covering household expenses, 6+ months of savings, or a side gig (driving, freelance, weekend work) that bridges the gap. None of those is a moral requirement — they're just what tends to make the math survivable.

If your household can't absorb 12-18 months of tightness, that doesn't kill the trade. It might just mean your timeline is wrong. Six more months of savings before you apply is not a failure; it's the move adults make.

Your next move

Three concrete things to do this week:

  1. Pull up the UA Local 300 page and the Bismarck State College welding program page. Note the next application or enrollment window date.
  2. Sit down with your monthly bills and write your survival number. The actual dollar figure your household needs to clear each month, not a vibe.
  3. Open a notebook. Day 30: ten hours of hood time at a community-college lab or shop. Day 60: applications submitted. Day 90: first AWS test attempt scheduled. Date them now.

If the numbers and the local picture make sense, the deeper playbook is in the Welder switch brief and the Welder Guide — interview prep, AWS test prep, sponsor due-diligence questions, and the certification details state-by-state.

You don't have to be 18 to become a welder. You just have to keep showing up and keep passing the test.

WELDER PAY IN NORTH DAKOTA
ENTRY
$16/hr
MEDIAN
$25/hr
EXPERIENCED
$40/hr

Estimated based on BLS data and North Dakota cost of living. Actual wages vary by employer, experience, and specialization.

WHERE THIS TRADE SITS IN THE NORTH DAKOTA LABOR MARKET

North Dakota: ~253 of 2.7K (~7.6%) · market pressure 61/100 — High pressure.

Welder earning $100K+ annually in North Dakota
~253 of 2.7K (~7.6%)

Confidence: medium. Annual labor earnings (W-2 wages + self-employment), not OEWS hourly-wage extrapolations.

Source: Census ACS 2024 5-year PUMS.

OEWS six-figure baseline (welder)
~45 of 2.7K (~1.7%)

Confidence: high. Log-normal fit residual is within tolerance.

Source: BLS OEWS straight-time wages.

Market pressure score (welder, North Dakota)
61/100 — High pressure

Confidence: medium. 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 North Dakota labor force
159K

Source: Census ACS 2022 5-year.

National comparison

Nationally: Insufficient data. 77.8M bachelor’s-holders in the U.S. labor force.

Sources: BLS OEWS; Census ACS PUMS; Projections Central; Census ACS 5-year subject. The OEWS baseline uses log-normal fits on OEWS wage percentiles; the $100K+ annual earners count uses ACS PUMS WAGP+SEMP labor earnings. See methodology.

Loading metro view

LOCAL MARKET SCORECARD (STATE)

36/100
INCOMPLETE SIGNALS — VERIFY LOCALLY

Heuristic score with 1/4 complete signal groups. Missing or thin: sponsor density, wage, demand.

Sponsor density 6/25

Sponsor density not available — verify locally

Wage strength 6/25

Wage data not available

Demand pressure 6/25

Demand data not yet published

Training accessibility 18/25

Clear licensing pathway

Heuristic summary of labor-market and program signals already published on this page. Confirm sponsor availability, licensing, and wages locally before making a paid training decision.

LICENSING & ELIGIBILITY

LICENSING IN NORTH DAKOTA

North Dakota has no statewide welder license. What employers and job-site GCs ask for is your AWS card — process, position, and material specific. The credentials that actually decide your pay:

  1. AWS Certified Welder (CW) — entry credential, tested on the process you'll work.
  2. AWS D1.1 Structural Steel — baseline for structural welders.
  3. AWS D1.5 Bridge Welding — required for state DOT and federal bridge work.
  4. ASME Section IX — pressure vessels, boilers, petrochemical piping.
  5. API 1104 — cross-country pipeline; the 6G position test is the headliner.
  6. AWS D17.1 — aerospace precision welding for Boeing, Lockheed, and the like.
  7. OSHA 10 entry credential, OSHA 30 by year two.

Specialty paths: structural steel, pipe (carbon, stainless, exotic alloys), aluminum, sheet metal, automotive, aerospace, underwater commercial. Each runs the same AWS framework but bends toward different daily work and material.

Verify with the official authority: AWS test fees, accredited test-facility lists, and any state-or-job-site-specific welder qualifications change. Treat this page as a starting point, then verify current AWS test requirements with aws.org and your apprenticeship sponsor or community-college program before you pay tuition or accept a placement claim.

FAQ

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

How much do welders actually make in North Dakota? +
Year-one welder pay runs $16-$20/hr in North Dakota — about $33k-$42k annually at 40 hours. Mid-career and journeyman scale clears $23-$31/hr; experienced AWS-certified welders and specialty hands reach $40-$48/hr or higher. Pipe welders on shutdown weeks, aerospace D17.1 welders, and underwater commercial divers stack overtime and per-diem on top. Verify your specific zip on unionpayscales.com — it's free and lets you sort by city, state, and trade.

Verify with the official authority: Licensing rules change. Treat this page as a starting point, then verify current hours, exams, fees, reciprocity, and local add-ons with the official state or local licensing authority before you apply, pay tuition, or accept a sponsor claim.

How do I actually get into welding in North Dakota? +
Welders are spread across multiple unions in North Dakota — Iron Workers (structural), UA (pipe), Boilermakers (pressure vessels), SMW (sheet metal) — with UA Local 300, Iron Workers Local 793, Boilermakers Local 647 as the headline locals. The other doors are community-college programs (Bismarck State College and others), AWS-aligned bootcamps, and direct-shop helper-to-welder pipelines. Bring high school diploma or GED, valid North Dakota driver's license, social security card, and DD-214 if you served. Spend ten hours under a hood before you commit.
Do I need a license to weld in North Dakota? +
North Dakota has no statewide welder license. The credential that actually decides your pay is which AWS test you can pass: D1.1 for structural steel, D1.5 for bridges, ASME Section IX for pressure vessels, API 1104 for pipeline, D17.1 for aerospace. Some specialty work and specific job sites add OSHA, fall protection, confined space, or respirator-fit credentials. Verify the current AWS test requirements with aws.org and any state-specific add-ons with your apprenticeship sponsor or community-college program before you commit.
How long does it take to become a welder in North Dakota? +
Plan on 2-4 years of training depending on the route. Community-college welding programs run 1-2 years and put you in front of an AWS test by graduation. Union apprenticeships run 3-4 years on the payroll. AWS-aligned bootcamps compress training into 7-10 months for adults who can't wait on a waitlist. Military welders (Navy hull-tech, Seabees, Army 91E, Marine Corps) often credit hours into an apprenticeship and reach journeyman faster. The test is the same regardless of route.
Is welding work in demand in North Dakota? +
Yes. North Dakota's mix runs oil and gas, pipeline, ag equipment, wind — Continental Resources, Hess Bakken, Marathon Petroleum Mandan refinery, Bobcat Company West Fargo keep AWS-certified welder demand steady, with major employment centers in Fargo and the other big metros. The state projects 11.6% growth over the next decade. Verify the current BLS OEWS and Projections Central pages before you commit. The biggest pay leverage sits with AWS-certified pipe welders during shutdowns and aerospace welders cleared for defense work.
Can I really switch into welding as an adult in North Dakota? +
Yes — there's no age limit. Adults in their 30s, 40s, and 50s enter every cycle. The honest part is the hand-eye conversation: stick rewards a steady hand and TIG punishes everything that isn't both. Prior fine-motor work — sport, instrument, another trade — helps you catch up. The financial part follows the standard pattern: year-one pay (~$33k-$42k) is tight in North Dakota's costlier metros, so most adults who survive year one have a working partner covering fixed costs, six-plus months of savings, or a side income running through. By year two most welders clear $48k-$54k.
How do adults survive year one financially in North Dakota? +
Three patterns work: (1) a partner covers fixed costs while you ramp; (2) you front-load 6-12 months of savings before applying so the first year doesn't run on credit; (3) you keep a side income (rideshare, freelance, weekend work) running through year one. Apprentice and entry welder pay in North Dakota starts at $16-$20/hr and steps up with each AWS cert you stack. By year two most welders clear $48k-$54k. The household conversation matters: rent, insurance, childcare, debt minimums, transport, and the $800-$3,000 first-year kit budget — write down your survival number before you apply.

Career switchers procrastinate because they do not know what to ask. This is the script.

  1. Are you a registered apprenticeship program?
  2. How many hours of OJT and classroom instruction are required?
  3. What is the starting wage?
  4. What is the raise schedule?
  5. When do benefits start?
  6. Are classes paid or unpaid?
  7. What nights and times are classes held?
  8. What are the expected book, tool, boot, dues, and fee costs?
  9. Do you place apprentices with contractors, or must I find my own employer?
  10. What happens if I am laid off?
  11. How are hours tracked for licensing?
  12. What percentage of applicants are accepted?
  13. Is there an aptitude test?
  14. What documents are required?
  15. What disqualifies applicants?
  16. Do you accept prior experience or military credit?
  17. What types of work do apprentices mostly do?
  18. Are apprentices expected to travel?
  19. What is the typical commute radius?
  20. What is the program completion rate?

The paid guide includes a checkable, printable version with extra trade-specific questions.

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Program counts are directional inventory signals, not a current census of open seats. Verify current programs, intakes, eligibility, and sponsor status with the official state apprenticeship office before relying.

State program and association lists show source-linked entities where Prentice has them; when a source-linked local entity is not shown, use the official statewide source to verify current sponsors, intakes, eligibility, and classroom options before relying.