Trade licensing overview · auto body technician
How auto body technician licensing works — Maryland
How this trade is regulated in Maryland. none-in-pilot-states The framework below describes the national pathway most auto body technicians in Maryland follow.
Auto body repair is generally not a state-licensed occupation at the technician level; most techs work under a shop-level registration or license issued to the collision facility. Professional standing typically comes from ASE Collision Repair series certifications, I-CAR role-based credentialing, and the federally required EPA Section 609 credential for servicing motor-vehicle air conditioning.
Auto Body Technician wages in Maryland · 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 auto body technician earnings in Maryland 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 Maryland
Auto Body Technicians in Maryland support collision repair shops, dealer body shops, and high-end specialty refinish. Work concentrates in the Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington and Washington-Arlington-Alexandria metro areas. The actual mix of project types depends on which segments of Maryland's economy are active in any given year.
Where they work
BLS reports auto body technician employment in Maryland concentrated in: Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD (2,530 employed, median $59,450); Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV (2,310 employed, median $60,750). Statewide reported employment is 2,380 workers (BLS OES, latest release).
Pay context
BLS OES reports a Maryland auto body technician median annual wage of $59,140 (SOC 49-3021, latest OES release), +18.3% versus the national median of $50,000. 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
I-CAR-aligned community-college collision-repair programs plus shop apprenticeships. OEM-certified shops (Ford, GM, Mopar, Tesla, Mercedes-Benz, BMW) offer manufacturer-specific advanced training that commands wage premiums.
Considerations
State workforce projections (Projections Central, base 2022–2032) estimate +8.1% growth in auto body technician employment over the decade, with about 300 annual openings. If you care about specialty pay, OEM-certified luxury and EV (Tesla, Rivian, Lucid) repair shops in affluent metros pay above general-collision rates. If you care about steady volume, insurance direct-repair-program (DRP) shops deliver consistent throughput.
Maryland auto body technician snapshot
| MSA | Employed | Median wage |
|---|---|---|
| Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD | 2,530 | $59,450 |
| Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV | 2,310 | $60,750 |
| Baltimore-Columbia-Towson, MD | 1,250 | $59,050 |
| Hagerstown-Martinsburg, MD-WV | 100 | $50,770 |
| Salisbury, MD | 80 | $55,560 |
STATE LICENSE STATUS
No pilot state (TX, CA, FL, NY, IL) issues a person-level auto-body technician license. Licensing is usually directed at the facility, not the individual: California requires registration of automotive repair dealers through the Bureau of Automotive Repair (https://www.bar.ca.gov), New York licenses motor-vehicle repair shops through the DMV (https://dmv.ny.gov/more-info/motor-vehicle-repair-shop-registration), Florida registers motor-vehicle repair shops through the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (https://www.fdacs.gov/Consumer-Resources/Motor-Vehicles-and-Boats/Motor-Vehicle-Repair), and Illinois does not require a statewide body-shop license. A small number of states, notably Michigan, Rhode Island, and Hawaii, tie shop licensing to certification of the technicians themselves; Michigan's Motor Vehicle Service and Repair Act requires each specialty-certified mechanic to hold a state mechanic certification in the categories the shop performs (https://www.michigan.gov/sos/all-services/business-services/mechanic). Verify the rule for a given address with the state Motor Vehicle department or equivalent before relying on it. The BLS OOH entry for automotive body and glass repairers describes no uniform state licensing (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/installation-maintenance-and-repair/automotive-body-and-glass-repairers.htm).
ASE CERTIFICATIONS
The National Institute for Automotive Service Excellence (ASE) administers the Collision Repair & Refinish (B-series) certification tests (https://www.ase.com/test-series). The series covers B2 Painting and Refinishing, B3 Non-Structural Analysis and Damage Repair, B4 Structural Analysis and Damage Repair, B5 Mechanical and Electrical Components, and B6 Damage Analysis and Estimating. A technician who holds current B2, B3, B4, and B5 certifications earns ASE Master Collision Repair and Refinish Technician status (https://www.ase.com/test-series). ASE certifications are valid for five years and require retesting to renew, with a documented work-experience prerequisite (https://www.ase.com/press-releases/ase-testing-recertification).
I-CAR TRAINING
I-CAR (Inter-Industry Conference on Auto Collision Repair) issues role-based credentials used by many insurer Direct Repair Program (DRP) networks (https://www.i-car.com). Individual training roles include Non-Structural Technician, Structural Technician, Refinish Technician, Steel Structural Technician, Aluminum Structural Technician, Mechanical Technician, and Damage Analyst (https://www.i-car.com/s/professional-development-and-training). Platinum Individual status recognizes a technician who has completed the required I-CAR courses for their role and maintains annual training hours (https://www.i-car.com/s/platinum). Gold Class is a shop-level designation awarded when a shop's required roles all hold current Platinum status and the shop meets the ongoing training requirement (https://info.i-car.com/gold-class). I-CAR credentials rely on annual continuing education and do not carry a state fee.
EPA 609 — MOTOR VEHICLE AC
Clean Air Act Section 609 requires any technician who services motor-vehicle air conditioning (MVAC) for compensation to be certified by an EPA-approved program (https://www.epa.gov/mvac/section-609-technician-training-and-certification-programs). Approved proctors include the Mobile Air Climate Systems Association (https://macsmobileairclimate.org/certification/), ASE (https://www.ase.org), and other organizations listed by EPA (https://www.epa.gov/mvac/section-609-technician-training-and-certification-programs). The credential is a one-time federal certification with no renewal requirement, but purchasing refrigerant in containers smaller than 20 lb requires proof of 609 certification at point of sale (https://www.epa.gov/mvac/stratospheric-ozone-refrigerant-sales-restrictions-motor-vehicle-air-conditioner-mvac).
TYPICAL PATHWAY
Entry pathways documented by the BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook include postsecondary collision-repair programs at technical colleges, DOL-registered apprenticeships, and direct hire as a detailer or prep technician with on-the-job training (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/installation-maintenance-and-repair/automotive-body-and-glass-repairers.htm). The DOL RAPIDS apprenticeship finder lists registered collision-repair programs by ZIP code (https://www.apprenticeship.gov/apprenticeship-job-finder). OEM-specific training is increasingly required to work on late-model vehicles with bonded aluminum bodies, high-strength steel, and ADAS sensors; manufacturer programs include the Ford Accelerated Credential Training for Employment (Ford ACE / Ford ASSET) program (https://www.ford.com/dealerships/learn/become-a-tech/), the GM Automotive Service Educational Program (GM ASEP) (https://www.gm.com/careers/students/asep), and Tesla's START program (https://www.tesla.com/careers/programs).