Education

Trade school and vocational training in DFW: Careers that don't need a 4-year degree

Not everyone needs a bachelor's degree. DFW trades are booming and paying well.

High-demand trades in DFW (with pay):

  • HVAC technician — DFW demand is massive (it's Texas, AC is life). Median: $52,000. Top earners: $75,000+. Source: BLS.gov.
  • Electrician — licensed journeyman median: $58,000. Master electrician: $80,000+. Source: BLS.gov.
  • Plumber — median: $55,000. Master plumber: $80,000+. DFW construction boom = constant demand.
  • Welding — $45,000-70,000 depending on certification. Specialized welding (underwater, pipeline): $100K+.
  • CDL truck driving — $50,000-70,000. DFW's location as a logistics hub means endless demand.

Where to train in DFW:

  • Lincoln Tech (Grand Prairie) — HVAC, automotive, welding. 7-15 month programs. Source: lincolntech.edu
  • Dallas College (DCCCD) career programs — 50+ trade and technical programs. Cheapest option. Source: dallascollege.edu
  • Tarrant County College — welding, HVAC, automotive, IT certifications. Source: tccd.edu
  • Universal Technical Institute (UTI) — auto, diesel, welding. Source: uti.edu
  • North Texas Electrical JATC — apprenticeship for electricians. Earn while you learn. Source: ntejatc.org

Apprenticeship programs (earn while you learn):

  • IBEW Local 20 (electrical) — 5-year apprenticeship with pay from day one. Source: ibew20.org
  • UA Local 100 (plumbing/pipefitting) — apprenticeship. Source: ualocal100.org
  • These are the best deal in education: you get paid to learn a skill that pays $60K+ at completion.

Timeline comparison:

  • 4-year degree: 4 years, $40,000-100,000 debt, entry salary $45,000-55,000
  • Trade certification: 6-24 months, $5,000-20,000 cost, entry salary $40,000-55,000
  • Apprenticeship: 4-5 years, $0 cost (you're paid), completion salary $60,000-80,000

Sources:

  • Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS.gov) — DFW metro data
  • School websites for program details
  • Union locals for apprenticeship info

Trades are not a backup plan. They're a career.

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 2:21 AM

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