Skip to content

An independent salary reference. Not affiliated with BLS or any U.S. government agency.

Salary data from BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics

Average Foresters Salary in the United States

The national median salary for Foresters is $70,660 per year. The middle 50% earn between $58,810 and $85,450, with 9,650 workers employed nationally.

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics survey, May 2024 estimates . Data covers 44 states and 58 metro areas.

$70,660
National median annual wage
$34/hour median
$74,670
National mean annual wage
$36/hour mean
9,650
National employment
$53,980
10th to 90th percentile spread
$49,240 to $103,220

Wage range

Pay distribution

Here is how Foresters pay is distributed across workers nationally. The 10th percentile typically reflects entry-level or early-career pay, the median is the midpoint, and the 90th percentile represents the top earners in the field.

10th
$49,240
25th
$58,810
Median
$70,660
75th
$85,450
90th
$103,220

All values are percentiles of annual wages.

Pay is well above the national median for all US workers. This is an upper-income occupation.

The spread between entry-level and top-end pay is typical for US occupations. Experience and specialization matter, but the range is not unusually wide.

BLS projections

Job outlook

BLS projects employment for foresters from 2024 to 2034. Growth is below the US average of roughly 4% across all occupations. The field is relatively stable but not expanding quickly.

Projected growth
+1.2%
200 net jobs over the projection period.
Annual openings
1,100
Includes growth plus replacements for workers who leave. Annual openings reflect typical replacement demand alongside any growth.
Typical entry education
Bachelor's degree

A bachelor's degree is the typical entry requirement for foresters.

Where Foresters earn the most

Location matters a lot. The gap between top-paying and bottom-paying states is large, so where foresters work can reshape their total compensation. Right now, the top-paying state is California at $98,870, about 39.9% above the national median. At the metro level, San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, CA leads with a median of $117,470.

By state

Top-paying states

StateMedian salaryEmployment
California$98,870830
Alaska$85,55080
Iowa$80,59050
Maryland$79,89090
Louisiana$79,580100
New Hampshire$79,230100
Connecticut$78,61080
Michigan$78,040320

By metro

Top-paying metros

Compare two locations side by side

Pick two states or metros to see foresters pay in each, along with a cost-of-living adjusted view.

Start a comparison

Salary trend and related occupations

Between 2019 and 2024, the national median salary for Foresters rose from $61,790 to $70,660, a gain of +14.4% in nominal dollars.

Over the same period, US consumer prices rose by +22.7%. Just to keep pace with inflation, the 2019 median of $61,790 would need to be worth $75,816 in 2024 dollars.

The actual 2024 median of $70,660 is −$5,156 below that inflation-adjusted benchmark, a real change of -6.8% in purchasing power.

Adjusted for inflation, pay has lost ground. Nominal growth of 14.4% has not kept up with rising prices.

Nominal change
+14.4%
2019–2024
Cumulative inflation
+22.7%
US CPI, 2019–2024
Real change
-6.8%
After adjusting for inflation

Annual history

Median salary over time

Foresters median pay by year, going back through the available BLS releases.

2019
$61,790
2020
$63,980
2021
$64,110
2022
$64,220
2023
$67,330
2024
$70,660

Similar jobs

Related occupations

Other occupations in the same field, with median pay for comparison.

Epidemiologists
$83,980
Microbiologists
$87,330

Common salary questions for Foresters

What does the median salary mean? +

The median is the midpoint of all wages. Half of Foresters workers earn more and half earn less. It is a better measure of typical pay than the average, which can be skewed by very high or very low earners.

Why does pay vary so much by location? +

Local labor markets, cost of living, industry concentration, and employer competition all affect wages. High-cost metros like San Francisco and New York often pay more in nominal terms, though some of that premium is offset by higher living costs.

How current is this salary data? +

This page uses the May 2024 BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics release. BLS publishes OEWS data once per year, typically in the spring for the previous May reference period.

What do the percentile ranges tell me? +

The 10th and 90th percentiles show the full pay band. The 25th to 75th percentile range, the middle 50%, is where most workers fall. A wide spread usually means experience, specialization, or location matter a lot for this occupation.