What do safety and EHS managers actually make? Here is the real picture, built from BLS wage data (May 2024 OEWS, released 2025) and the BCSP/NSC salary survey — broken down by experience, location, industry, certification and the full career ladder, with a free estimator.
"How much do safety managers make?" is the single most-asked question in this field — and most answers online are vague. So let's anchor it in real data. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) does not publish a standalone "safety manager" occupation, so the cleanest official anchors come from its Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS) survey, May 2024 (released 2025): occupational health and safety specialists (SOC 19-5011) — the title many people start with — had a median annual wage of $83,910, while occupational health and safety technicians (SOC 19-5012) had a median of $58,440. Layer in private-sector salary aggregators that track the "EHS manager" title directly, and the working manager number lands around $110,000–$122,000 in 2026 (Salary.com puts the average near $121,690; ZipRecruiter's health & safety manager average is closer to $107,000).
That spread is the whole story: a safety career can pay anywhere from the high-$50Ks to well over $170,000, and the difference comes down to experience, location, industry, and certification. Below we break down each lever, then show you how to push your number higher.
If you want one official figure to quote: per the BLS May 2024 OEWS (released 2025), occupational health and safety specialists (SOC 19-5011) earn a median of $83,910. The distribution matters as much as the median — the BLS reports a 10th percentile of $50,610 (early-career and lower-cost regions) and a 90th percentile of $130,460 (senior specialists in high-paying industries and metros). Technicians (SOC 19-5012) sit lower, with a median of $58,440 — that band covers field-level inspection and monitoring roles. A working safety/EHS manager sits above the specialist band, around $110,000–$122,000 per private-sector aggregators (Salary.com, ZipRecruiter, Payscale). The BCSP/NSC Safety Salary Survey likewise found that the median full-time safety professional now earns over $105,000 — the first time the survey crossed six figures.
Why the gap between the BLS and the aggregators? The BLS OEWS is an employer-reported survey covering the whole labor market, including small employers and lower-paying regions, so it tends to read conservative — and it has no dedicated "safety manager" code, so it tends to undercount the title. Self-reported sites lean toward respondents at larger firms in major metros, which pulls the average up. A third source — the BCSP/NSC survey — captures the certified population specifically, which is why its medians run higher than the general specialist figure. When you see wildly different numbers quoted online, this is almost always the reason: they are measuring different people. Treat the BLS specialist median ($83,910) as your floor, the BCSP survey as the "credentialed professional" benchmark, and aggregator data as a read on large-employer manager pay.
One more clarification on titles. "Safety officer," "EHS specialist," "HSE advisor" and "safety coordinator" usually map to the BLS specialist band (median $83,910). "Safety technician" maps to the lower 19-5012 band ($58,440 median). "Safety manager," "EHS manager" and "HSE manager" map to the higher manager band — roughly the $110k–$122k aggregator range. The word "manager" in your title is itself worth real money — which is why the specialist-to-manager promotion is the most consequential salary event in most careers.
Experience is the strongest single predictor of pay in this field — and it maps cleanly onto the BLS percentile spread (the 10th percentile of $50,610 is roughly where careers start; the 90th of $130,460 is where senior specialists land). A rough 2026 ladder:
| Stage | Typical experience | Typical base pay (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| Entry / safety officer or technician | 0–3 years | $55,000 – $78,000 |
| Mid-career safety specialist | 3–7 years | $78,000 – $100,000 |
| Safety / EHS manager | 7–12 years | $100,000 – $135,000 |
| Senior manager / EHS director | 12–20 years | $135,000 – $185,000+ |
| VP / Head of EHS (enterprise) | 20+ years | $180,000 – $260,000+ |
The biggest jumps happen at two thresholds: moving from individual contributor to people-and-budget responsibility (the specialist-to-manager step, worth roughly $25k–$30k), and again moving into a director/VP role with enterprise accountability and bonus exposure.
Geography moves the number by 30% or more. The highest-paying states for safety roles are a mix of high-cost-of-living markets (California, Washington, New Jersey) and resource-and-energy economies (Alaska, Texas Gulf Coast). The figures below are approximate annual means for safety/EHS roles, blended from BLS state OEWS estimates and aggregator data — treat them as directional, not precise.
| State / region | Approx. mean (safety/EHS) | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Alaska | $115,000 – $130,000 | Oil & gas, remote-site premiums, high COL |
| California | $110,000 – $128,000 | Cal/OSHA stringency, tech & biotech, high COL |
| Washington | $108,000 – $125,000 | Aerospace, ports, strong state OSHA program |
| Texas (Gulf Coast) | $105,000 – $135,000 | Refining, petrochemicals, LNG — top private pay |
| New Jersey | $100,000 – $120,000 | Pharma, chemicals, logistics; high COL |
| Louisiana | $95,000 – $120,000 | Petrochemical corridor; lower COL = higher real pay |
| Southeast / Midwest (avg) | $85,000 – $105,000 | Manufacturing-heavy, moderate COL |
| Rural & lower-cost states | $70,000 – $92,000 | Lower nominal pay, but lower living costs |
Important caveat: a $128k California salary and a $110k Louisiana salary can buy roughly the same lifestyle once you adjust for cost of living and state income tax. The Gulf Coast (Texas, Louisiana) is the value sweet spot — top private-sector energy pay with no/low state income tax and cheaper housing.
Industry is the second-biggest lever after experience. The pattern is simple: the higher the consequence of failure, the higher the pay. Sectors with catastrophic risk and heavy regulation (Process Safety Management, EPA, MSHA) pay a clear premium.
| Industry | Relative pay | Manager-level range |
|---|---|---|
| Oil & gas / energy | Top tier | $125,000 – $185,000+ |
| Chemicals & pharmaceuticals | Top tier | $120,000 – $170,000 |
| Mining & metals | High | $115,000 – $165,000 |
| Utilities / power | High | $110,000 – $155,000 |
| Construction & engineering | Mid–high | $95,000 – $140,000 |
| Manufacturing & logistics | Mid | $90,000 – $130,000 |
| Healthcare & food | Mid–low | $80,000 – $115,000 |
| Public sector / education | Lower (but stable) | $70,000 – $110,000 |
If maximizing income is your goal, the path is clear: oil & gas, chemicals, and pharma. The trade-off is on-call demands, travel, turnaround/shutdown intensity, and the seriousness of Process Safety Management work. Public-sector roles pay less but offer pension, predictable hours, and strong job security.
A few industry nuances worth knowing. Construction safety pay varies sharply by project type — heavy civil, oil & gas EPC, and high-rise work pay well above residential or light commercial. Contract and consulting roles (often billed at a day rate during turnarounds or large capital projects) can out-earn a salaried equivalent for the duration of the project, at the cost of stability. And remote-site or rotational roles (offshore, pipeline, mining camps, Alaska's North Slope) carry significant premiums and per-diems precisely because they're hard to staff. If you are mobile and credentialed, those rotational roles are among the fastest routes to a six-figure income early in a career.
This is the highest-ROI lever you control. The BCSP/NSC Safety Salary Survey is unambiguous on this point:
In dollar-per-hour-studied terms, no other move comes close. A CSP costs a few hundred dollars and several months of study; the resulting pay bump compounds for the rest of your career. If you read one thing next, make it our NEBOSH vs IOSH vs CSP comparison to pick the right credential for your market.
One practical note: certifications pay most when they match your industry. In U.S. industrial and energy markets, the CSP and CIH are the credentials employers reward in salary bands. In the UK, Gulf and Commonwealth markets, NEBOSH qualifications and IOSH membership carry the same signalling power. Earning the credential your target employers actually recruit for is what unlocks the premium — a mismatched certificate looks good on a wall but moves the offer letter far less.
Titles vary by employer, but the trajectory is consistent. Knowing where you sit — and what the next rung pays — is half the battle in any salary negotiation.
The fastest, most reliable moves, in order:
Stop guessing from generic averages. Plug in your role, state, industry, experience and certifications and get a tailored range:
How much does a safety manager make in 2026?
The BLS May 2024 OEWS (released 2025) reports a median of $83,910 for occupational health and safety specialists (SOC 19-5011) and $58,440 for occupational health and safety technicians (SOC 19-5012); there is no standalone BLS "safety manager" code. EHS-manager titles average roughly $110,000–$122,000 across salary aggregators (Salary.com, ZipRecruiter, Payscale), with directors in high-risk industries reaching $140,000–$170,000+.
What is the difference between a safety specialist and a safety manager salary?
Specialists (BLS 19-5011) had a median of $83,910 in the BLS May 2024 OEWS, with a 10th percentile of $50,610 and a 90th percentile of $130,460; managers, who carry budget and program ownership, sit around $110,000–$122,000 per aggregator data — roughly a $25k–$30k step up.
How much does a CSP certification add to a safety salary?
Per the BCSP/NSC Safety Salary Survey, the CSP typically adds over $30,000 versus no credential; any safety certification adds about $18,000 to median pay.
Which states pay safety managers the most?
Alaska, California, Washington, New Jersey and the Texas Gulf Coast lead, driven by energy, chemicals and cost of living. Adjust every figure for local cost of living and state taxes.
Which industries pay safety managers the most?
Oil & gas, chemicals/pharma, mining and utilities pay top dollar; construction and manufacturing are mid-range; public sector and education pay less but offer stability.