Trade licensing overview · diesel mechanic
How diesel mechanic licensing works — Arkansas
How this trade is regulated in Arkansas. none-as-profession The framework below describes the national pathway most diesel mechanics in Arkansas follow.
Diesel mechanic is not a state-licensed profession in the United States. Competence is proven through ASE Medium/Heavy Truck (T-series) or Transit Bus (H-series) certifications, FMCSA 49 CFR Part 396 Appendix G inspector qualifications, EPA refrigerant credentials, OEM factory programs, and, in a handful of states, a state-approved mechanic stamp tied to the vehicle safety-inspection program.
Diesel Mechanic wages in Arkansas · BLS OES A01 2024
Wages are state-level annual figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program (A01 2024). Specific diesel mechanic earnings in Arkansas vary by metro area, employer type, union membership, and years of experience. Verify the current state and metro figures on the BLS OES site (bls.gov/oes).
What this trade actually looks like in Arkansas
Diesel Mechanics in Arkansas support long-haul trucking, transit bus, off-road and oilfield equipment, and dealer service. Work concentrates in the Memphis and Little Rock-North Little Rock-Conway metro areas. The actual mix of project types depends on which segments of Arkansas's economy are active in any given year.
Where they work
BLS reports diesel mechanic employment in Arkansas concentrated in: Memphis, TN-MS-AR (1,540 employed, median $63,710); Little Rock-North Little Rock-Conway, AR (1,110 employed, median $56,380). Statewide reported employment is 4,580 workers (BLS OES, latest release).
Pay context
BLS OES reports a Arkansas diesel mechanic median annual wage of $51,300 (SOC 49-3031, latest OES release), -13.0% versus the national median of $58,970. Cost-of-living, metro versus rural premium, union density, and years of experience all move the actual paycheck. Verify the current state and metro figures at https://www.bls.gov/oes/.
Training pathway
Community-college diesel-tech AAS programs plus dealer-sponsored apprenticeships (Cummins, Detroit Diesel, Volvo, Mack, Freightliner). UAW and Teamsters represent some transit and unionized fleet shops.
Considerations
State workforce projections (Projections Central, base 2022–2032) estimate +2.9% growth in diesel mechanic employment over the decade, with about 420 annual openings. If you care about straight-line earnings, OEM dealer master techs and oilfield diesel mechanics earn the most. If you care about benefits and stability, transit-authority and municipal-fleet jobs offer pension paths.
Arkansas diesel mechanic snapshot
| MSA | Employed | Median wage |
|---|---|---|
| Memphis, TN-MS-AR | 1,540 | $63,710 |
| Little Rock-North Little Rock-Conway, AR | 1,110 | $56,380 |
| Fayetteville-Springdale-Rogers, AR | 880 | $57,810 |
| Fort Smith, AR-OK | 460 | $51,910 |
| Jonesboro, AR | 260 | $57,550 |
STATE LICENSE STATUS
No U.S. state issues a person-level diesel-mechanic license as a profession. A small group of states require an approved mechanic/inspector credential tied to the state's motor vehicle safety-inspection program: New York (Motor Vehicle Inspector certification via NYSDMV, https://dmv.ny.gov/inspection), Pennsylvania (Official Safety Inspection Mechanic through PennDOT, administered by the inspection-station program, https://www.dmv.pa.gov), Virginia (Safety Inspector certified by the Virginia State Police Safety Division, https://www.vsp.virginia.gov/Safety_OfficialInspectionStation.shtm), and Massachusetts (RMV Inspector license via the Massachusetts Vehicle Check program, https://www.mass.gov/vehicle-check). These credentials authorize the holder to perform the state inspection, not to practice diesel mechanics generally. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics places diesel service technicians and mechanics under SOC 49-3031 with no state license listed as standard entry (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/installation-maintenance-and-repair/diesel-service-technicians-and-mechanics.htm).
ASE MEDIUM/HEAVY TRUCK AND TRANSIT BUS
The National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence (ASE) issues the Medium/Heavy Truck T-series and Transit Bus H-series as the standard voluntary credentials (https://www.ase.org). The T-series covers T1 Gasoline Engines, T2 Diesel Engines, T3 Drive Train, T4 Brakes, T5 Suspension and Steering, T6 Electrical/Electronic Systems, T7 Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning, and T8 Preventive Maintenance Inspection (https://www.ase.com/test-series). Master Medium/Heavy Truck Technician requires passing T2 through T8 (https://www.ase.org). The Transit Bus series mirrors this structure as H1 Compressed Natural Gas, H2 Diesel Engines, H3 Drive Train, H4 Brakes, H5 Suspension and Steering, H6 Electrical/Electronic Systems, H7 HVAC, and H8 Preventive Maintenance Inspection (https://www.ase.com/test-series). ASE certifications are valid for five years and require retesting or continuing-education renewal per ASE policy (https://www.ase.org). The American Trucking Associations' Technology & Maintenance Council (TMC) publishes Recommended Practices used by many shops as the baseline for PM intervals and inspection procedures (https://www.tmctruckingtechnology.org).
FMCSA ANNUAL INSPECTOR
Commercial motor vehicles operating in interstate commerce require an annual inspection under 49 CFR Part 396.17 (https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/regulations/title49/section/396.17). The inspector's qualifications are set in 49 CFR Part 396.19 and the inspection criteria are listed in Appendix A to Part 396 (https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/regulations/title49/part/396). A qualified annual inspector must document at least one year of training or experience as a mechanic or inspector in a motor vehicle maintenance program, plus knowledge and ability to identify defects listed in Appendix A (https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/regulations/title49/section/396.19). Brake inspector qualifications under 49 CFR 396.25 are separate and require documented training or experience on brake service and inspection (https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/regulations/title49/section/396.25). Many fleets pair the FMCSA annual inspector role with a state safety-inspection stamp where the state requires one.
EPA REFRIGERANT CREDENTIALS — 609 AND 608
Technicians who service motor vehicle air conditioning (MVAC) systems on trucks, buses, or off-road equipment must hold an EPA Section 609 credential under 40 CFR Part 82 Subpart B (https://www.epa.gov/mvac/section-609-technician-training-and-certification-programs). Section 609 is typically issued by program sponsors such as MACS Worldwide or ESCO Institute and does not expire (https://www.epa.gov/mvac). Technicians who service stationary refrigeration, including reefer-container shop systems or facility HVAC, need EPA Section 608 under 40 CFR Part 82 Subpart F, with Type I, Type II, Type III, or Universal categories (https://www.epa.gov/section608/section-608-technician-certification). Section 608 certification also does not expire once issued, though sponsors may require re-examination if lost (https://www.epa.gov/section608).
APPRENTICESHIP AND OEM PROGRAMS
Formal entry routes include community-college diesel technology AAS degrees, DOL-registered apprenticeships through the Apprenticeship.gov finder (https://www.apprenticeship.gov/apprenticeship-job-finder), and OEM factory programs. Caterpillar Dealer Service Technician programs (ThinkBIG) run as two-year AAS partnerships between Cat dealers and community colleges (https://www.caterpillar.com). Cummins Technical Education for Communities (TEC) and dealer ACT apprenticeships train on Cummins engine platforms (https://www.cummins.com). Daimler/Detroit Diesel Technician Career Apprenticeship (formerly DPA/FTF) places apprentices at Freightliner and Detroit dealers (https://www.demanddetroit.com). PACCAR (Kenworth and Peterbilt) runs the PACCAR Technician Institute and dealer-based technician programs (https://www.paccar.com). A CDL Class A or Class B, issued under FMCSA 49 CFR Part 383 (https://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/regulations/title49/part/383) and administered by state DMVs, is commonly required to road-test trucks and buses and is a frequent hiring preference per the BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/installation-maintenance-and-repair/diesel-service-technicians-and-mechanics.htm).