Agricultural Equipment Operators Salary in Michigan
SOC 45-2091 · Michigan (Grand Rapids-Wyoming-Kentwood, MI MSA unavailable) · BLS OEWS May 2024
Median Annual Salary
$42,598
$20.48/hr
0% higher than the US national median ($42,578)
Verified BLS OEWS data · Updated Apr 3, 2025
Source: BLS OEWS · Published Apr 2, 2025
Next refresh: May 15, 2026
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ⓘBLS doesn’t publish metro-level figures for Agricultural Equipment Operators in Grand Rapids-Wyoming-Kentwood, MI. Showing Michigan state-level data instead. How we fall back →
The median salary for Agricultural Equipment Operators in Michigan is $42,598 per year ($20.48/hr). This is 0% higher than the national median of $42,578.
About This Role
BLS Standard Occupational Classification 2018
Drive and control equipment to support agricultural activities such as tilling soil; planting, cultivating, and harvesting crops; feeding and herding livestock; or removing animal waste. May perform tasks such as crop baling or hay bucking. May operate stationary equipment to perform post-harvest tasks such as husking, shelling, threshing, and ginning.
Wage Percentiles: Michigan
Hourly & annualized (2,080 hours) · National adjusted
No credit card required · 755+ occupations · 393 metros
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the median agricultural equipment operators salary in Michigan?
The median (P50) annual salary for Agricultural Equipment Operators in Michigan is approximately $42,598, based on BLS OEWS May 2024 data. This is 0% higher than the national median of $42,578. For the full P10–P90 breakdown and market context, open CompSignal.
Wage figures on this page come from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Occupational Employment & Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey, May 2024 release. OEWS surveys roughly 1.1 million establishments annually. It is the most comprehensive employer-reported wage dataset in the United States.
P10 through P90 percentiles represent the wage distribution across all surveyed employers (not self-reported by workers). Geographic adjustments use BLS-derived cost multipliers calibrated from regional wage variation.
Wages are estimates. Individual compensation depends on experience, education, employer size, industry, and negotiation. Use this as benchmark context, not absolute ground truth.
CompSignal is a free labor market intelligence tool built for HR, compensation, and talent acquisition teams. We make BLS data, the same primary source Mercer and Radford cross-reference in their paid surveys, searchable and actionable without an enterprise subscription.
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