A side-by-side comparison of salary, job growth, and training to help you choose between becoming a electrician and a medical laboratory technician.
| Electrician | Medical Laboratory Technician | |
|---|---|---|
| BLS median salary | $62,350 | $61,890 |
| Typical salary range | $62,000-$106,000 | $62,000-$98,000 |
| Job growth (2024–34) | 9% | 2% |
| Time to job-ready | 4-5 years apprenticeship | 2 years (associate) or 4 years (bachelor) |
| Typical training cost | Often paid (earn while you train) | $15,000 |
Electrician has the higher BLS median wage ($62,350), while Medical Laboratory Technician gets you earning faster (2 years (associate) or 4 years (bachelor)). Electrician has the stronger projected job growth (9% through 2034). Your degree is an advantage in either — use the quiz to see which fits your background, or run both through the ROI calculator against your student loans.
Discover the answers that guide patient care
Median wages: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (May 2024). Training costs and timelines are typical estimates. Data last updated June 2026.