Overview
Pipefitters install and maintain high-pressure piping systems in industrial, commercial, and utility settings. Most licensing comes through union apprenticeships or state contractor boards.
Pipefitters license through LARA. UA Local 636 (Detroit) and others are primary paths.
^ TopLicense tiers and what each allows
| License | What you can do | Exam required |
|---|---|---|
| Apprentice Pipefitter | Training level. Work under supervision. No independent work. | Registration only |
| Journeyman Pipefitter | Install, repair, and maintain systems under supervision or independently in most states. | Yes. State licensing exam (~$75 fee) |
| Foreman | Full independent work, supervise others, pull permits, design systems. | Yes. Advanced state exam |
Step-by-step path
Register as an apprentice
Register with Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA) before starting work. This is required to legally accumulate supervised hours toward your journeyman qualification. Some states charge a small registration fee.
Accumulate 8,000 hours of supervised experience
Work under a licensed journeyman or master pipefitter. This takes approximately 4 years at full-time hours. Your employer is required to verify your hours when you apply for the journeyman exam.
Pass the journeyman licensing exam
The exam covers United Association (UA) Journeyman Card requirements and state-specific rules. Exam fee is $75. Most candidates study 4-8 weeks using a state-approved prep guide before sitting for the test.
Apply for your journeyman license
Submit your application to Michigan Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs (LARA) after passing the exam. License fee is $75. Processing typically takes 2-4 weeks. Your employer's verification of your hours is required at this stage.
Renew annual
Your Michigan license renews annual. Renewal fee is $75. Some states require continuing education at renewal. Always renew on time to avoid a lapse in licensure.
Fee summary
| Item | Fee |
|---|---|
| Apprentice registration | Varies (check board) |
| Journeyman exam | $75 |
| Journeyman license | $75 |
| License renewal (annual) | $75 |
Salary by experience level
Wages vary by license level, metro area, and union status. The estimates below reflect typical ranges nationally; Michigan wages are approximately $77,030/yr at journeyman level (BLS May 2024 median).
| Stage | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Apprentice | $18–$28/hr | Supervised training period; wage increases each year |
| Journeyman | $28–$46/hr | After licensure; independent work authorized |
| Master / Contractor | $46–$70/hr | Supervisory authority, permit rights, contractor eligibility |
Realistic timeline: start to licensed
Here is a realistic calendar for someone starting from scratch with no prior experience.
| Phase | Duration | What happens |
|---|---|---|
| Apprentice registration | 1–2 weeks | Register with state board or UA local union apprenticeship. |
| Supervised hours | ~5 years | UA apprenticeship is 5 years (10,000 hours); non-union may qualify with 8,000 hours. |
| Exam preparation | 4–8 weeks | Study pipe codes, blueprint reading, and system design. |
| Schedule and pass exam | 2–4 weeks | State board written exam; some states also require a practical. |
| License application processing | 2–4 weeks | Submit application with verified hours and exam results. |
Union vs. independent path
Pipefitters have one of the strongest union presences of any trade. The UA (United Association) represents pipefitters alongside plumbers and HVAC workers. Both paths lead to the same state license — the difference is in how you accumulate your hours and the employment benefits you receive during training.
| Union (UA) | Non-union / independent | |
|---|---|---|
| Training program | 5-year UA apprenticeship, tuition-free | Employer OJT (industrial employers) |
| Wages during training | Starting at ~50% journeyman scale, increasing annually | Varies significantly by employer |
| Benefits | Full union benefits (health, pension, annuity) | Employer-dependent |
| Job placement | UA union hall dispatch to industrial contractors | Self-directed; industrial employers recruit directly |
| Welding certification | UA program includes welding certification tracks | Candidate's own responsibility |
| Post-license mobility | UA card recognized by signatory contractors nationally | Depends on state reciprocity |
Transferring your license from another state
Pipefitter license reciprocity varies by state. Some states have reciprocal agreements for journeyman-level pipefitters. UA card holders working for signatory contractors have de facto national mobility. Contact the state licensing board to verify if your credentials transfer.
If you currently hold a pipefitter license in another state and want to work in Michigan, contact the Michigan Bureau of Construction Codes (BCC) directly before applying. Bring documentation of your current license, your work history, and your exam scores — many boards will expedite review for out-of-state applicants with equivalent credentials.
Plumbers and pipefitters both work under the UA union umbrella but on different systems. See the Plumber license guide for Michigan for comparison.
Industrial facilities hire both pipefitters and electricians — see the Electrician license guide for Michigan.
Exam registration & resources
Where to register for your licensing exam and track your application.
- UA — United Association apprenticeship applications The UA (United Association of Plumbers and Pipefitters) runs the largest pipefitter apprenticeship programs. Find your local union and apply here. ua.org
- PSI Exams — Pipefitter licensing exam States that require a separate pipefitter license use PSI for exam registration. candidate.psiexams.com
- NCCER — Pipefitting credentials and testing NCCER offers nationally recognized pipefitting credentials accepted by many contractors and states. nccer.org
Pipefitter Jobs in Michigan
Current openings near you — updated daily.
Job listings via Adzuna