In Atlanta, average pay across the four positions is more than 16% less than for the other eight markets, and too low to keep pace with cost of living. But while remodelers there are certainly paying less, the data is not completely what it seems. For example, lead carpenters have a median salary of $60K, nearly $5K less than the average, or mean. This points to more salaries at the higher end, meaning a few low numbers pulled down the entire average for lead carpenters.
Carpenters with 2-5 years’ experience are paid better than their counterparts in every market but San Francisco. They also out-earn Atlanta carpenters with a higher number of years under their belt. The city’s low wages overall could reflect a shortage of workers at both extremes of the experience scale.
Atlanta lags behind other markets in rewarding job-related education. Carpenters fare best, earning 10.3% more with education than without (the average for all cities is 10.2%). Leads actually earn 7.0% less, while project and production managers earn 3.2% and 1.0% less, respectively.
The rate of increase in Atlanta wages has jumped from 1.3% two years ago to 3.7% last year and is projected to increase slightly, to 4.0% in 2019. Average wage growth for all positions in Atlanta for the period from 2015 to 2017 was 5.0%, slightly behind the nine-city average of 5.3%.
Among the nine cities studied, Atlanta ranks last or next to last in the number of companies offering paid time off (PTO), medical, dental, and 401(k) benefits. Gas allowances are offered by a slightly above-average number of companies, and the number offering company vehicles ranks second overall.