Missouri Plumbing Workforce and Industry Statistics

Missouri's plumbing workforce sits at the intersection of state licensing requirements, Bureau of Labor Statistics occupational data, and the structural demand patterns driven by residential construction, commercial development, and infrastructure replacement. This page covers workforce size, wage benchmarks, employer composition, and industry growth indicators relevant to the Missouri plumbing sector. Professionals, policy researchers, and workforce analysts use these figures to assess labor supply gaps, training pipeline adequacy, and regional employment distribution across the state.

Definition and scope

The Missouri plumbing industry workforce encompasses licensed plumbing contractors, journeyman plumbers, apprentices enrolled in registered programs, and plumbing inspectors employed by state and municipal bodies. The Missouri Division of Professional Registration administers licensing through the State Board of Plumbers, which sets the qualification thresholds that define who legally enters the counted workforce.

Workforce statistics in this sector draw from multiple data streams. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) publishes State Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics under Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) code 47-2152 for plumbers, pipefitters, and steamfitters. The Missouri Department of Labor and Industrial Relations (DOLIR) tracks employment and wage data through Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages (QCEW) records submitted by employers. These two datasets measure overlapping but distinct populations — BLS estimates include self-employed sole proprietors; QCEW captures only employer-employee payroll relationships.

The full regulatory framing governing who must hold a Missouri license before entering the counted licensed workforce is detailed at /regulatory-context-for-missouri-plumbing.

Scope and coverage limitations: This page covers workforce and industry statistics applicable to Missouri as a state. It does not address federal plumbing workforce programs under the Davis-Bacon Act, cross-state reciprocity headcounts, or labor conditions in Illinois, Kansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Kentucky, Iowa, Nebraska, or Arkansas — the eight states bordering Missouri. Municipal-level employment rules in Kansas City and St. Louis that supplement state licensing counts fall outside the aggregate statistics discussed here.

How it works

Missouri plumbing workforce data is assembled through a three-tier reporting structure:

  1. Licensed headcount — The Missouri State Board of Plumbers maintains active license records. License categories include Master Plumber, Journeyman Plumber, and Plumbing Contractor. A single individual may hold multiple license types simultaneously, so raw license counts overstate unique individuals.
  2. Employer payroll reporting — Licensed plumbing contractors with employees report wages quarterly to DOLIR under the QCEW program. This produces employer-of-record counts, average weekly wages, and establishment counts broken down by county.
  3. Apprenticeship pipeline data — The U.S. Department of Labor Office of Apprenticeship tracks registered apprenticeship completions and active registrants by state. Missouri apprenticeship programs in plumbing are sponsored primarily by United Association (UA) locals, including UA Local 8 (St. Louis) and UA Local 8's jurisdiction, and UA Local 533 (Kansas City), which report completion rates annually to the national RAPIDS database (Department of Labor Apprenticeship).

According to BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics, Missouri employed approximately 15,900 plumbers, pipefitters, and steamfitters as of the most recent state-level OES publication. The annual mean wage for this occupational group in Missouri was reported at approximately $67,000, below the national mean of approximately $73,000 for the same classification — a gap that reflects regional cost-of-living differentials and union density variation.

Missouri's plumbing establishment count, as tracked by the U.S. Census Bureau's County Business Patterns under NAICS code 238220 (Plumbing, Heating, and Air-Conditioning Contractors), includes both plumbing-only firms and combined mechanical contractors. The majority of Missouri plumbing establishments employ fewer than 10 workers, consistent with national patterns in specialty trade contracting.

Common scenarios

Understanding how workforce data applies requires distinguishing four operating contexts:

Urban core markets (Kansas City, St. Louis): These two metropolitan statistical areas account for a disproportionate share of Missouri's licensed plumber concentration. Commercial construction density, hospital and institutional work, and multi-family residential projects drive demand for journeyman and master plumber credentials at higher volume than rural regions.

Rural and small-town Missouri: Across Missouri's 114 counties and 1 independent city, rural counties face documented workforce shortages in licensed plumbing trades. Small operators — often sole-proprietor master plumbers serving a 3- to 5-county area — represent a distinct segment not captured in employer payroll data. The contrast between rural and urban plumbing workforce dynamics is examined at missouri-plumbing-rural-vs-urban-differences.

New construction cycles: Workforce demand spikes during residential building permit surges. Missouri Department of Economic Development tracks residential building permits, and plumbing labor demand correlates directly with single-family starts. In high-permit years, apprenticeship programs report accelerated completion timelines as contractors absorb trainees early.

Replacement and renovation demand: Infrastructure age in Missouri's older cities — particularly St. Louis, where cast-iron and lead-service-line replacement programs are active — creates sustained demand independent of new construction. This maintenance and replacement segment employs a stable base of journeyman plumbers year-round.

Decision boundaries

Industry statistics in Missouri plumbing divide along four classification lines:

For the broader structural overview of how Missouri's plumbing sector is organized, the Missouri Plumbing Authority index provides entry-point navigation to licensing, code, and regulatory reference material.


References

📜 1 regulatory citation referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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