Best Plumbing Schools in New York (2026)

New York Quick Facts

MetricValueSource
State median annual wage$77,490BLS OEWS, May 2025
State employment23,210 workersBLS OEWS, May 2025
State location quotient0.80BLS OEWS, May 2025
State unemployment rate3.9%BLS LAUS (2024)
Federal Davis-Bacon prevailing wage$70.56/hr ($42.68 base + $27.88 fringe)DOL Wage and Hour Division, 2026

Top Cities for Plumber Training in New York

The cities below have the highest concentration of plumber training programs and population centers within New York. Click through for school listings near each:

Steps to Become a Plumber in New York

  1. Choose an accredited training path. Options include trade schools, community colleges, and registered apprenticeships.
  2. Complete classroom instruction in code, safety, and trade theory.
  3. Log on-the-job training hours under a licensed or experienced professional.
  4. Pass any required state or local exam.
  5. Apply for licensure or certification, then maintain it through continuing education as required by the state.

Apprenticeship Programs in New York

In New York, registered apprenticeships are coordinated through the New York Office of Apprenticeship (CareerOneStop, U.S. Department of Labor). Apprenticeships combine paid on-the-job training with related classroom instruction, typically over 3 to 5 years.

About Plumbing Careers in New York

Plumbers install and repair piping systems for water supply, drainage, and gas distribution in residential, commercial, and industrial settings.

In New York, the BLS reports a median annual wage of $77,490, about 23,210 workers in the occupation, a location quotient of 0.80 (BLS OEWS, May 2025).

Career outlook varies by region and specialization. Refer to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Outlook Handbook for national projections and Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics for the latest state and metropolitan area data.


About this guide: Researched and written by the TradeCareerPath Editorial Team. Our editorial team researches and sources every trade career guide using BLS, DOL, and state licensing data. We follow the editorial standards documented at /editorial-policy/.