Trade licensing overview · mason
How mason licensing works — Montana
How this trade is regulated in Montana. none-in-pilot-states The framework below describes the national pathway most masons in Montana follow.
Masonry is not a person-level licensed trade in most U.S. states. Masons typically work under a contractor's license when self-employed above a state dollar threshold, and prove skill through BAC/IMI apprenticeship completion, employer testing, or product-council certifications (PCC, NCMA, refractory programs).
Mason wages in Montana · 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 mason earnings in Montana 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 Montana
Masons in Montana support brick veneer residential, commercial CMU, stone, and institutional restoration. The actual mix of project types depends on which segments of Montana's economy are active in any given year.
Where they work
BLS reports approximately 210 masons employed across Montana, distributed among the state's metro areas without a single dominant concentration in the OES metro file.
Pay context
BLS OES reports a Montana mason median annual wage of $65,070 (SOC 47-2021, latest OES release), +24.5% versus the national median of $52,260. 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
Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers (BAC) JATCs and open-shop apprenticeships through brick-supply distributors. Stone-restoration and historic-masonry specialty work is concentrated in older Northeast and Mid-Atlantic cities.
Considerations
State workforce projections (Projections Central, base 2022–2032) estimate +14.4% growth in mason employment over the decade, with about 30 annual openings. If you care about specialty earnings, restoration masons in NYC, Boston, Philadelphia, and DC command premium rates. If you care about entry-level demand, brick-veneer residential in Southeast growth markets has steady volume but lower scale.
Montana mason snapshot
STATE LICENSE STATUS
No pilot state (TX, CA, FL, NY, IL) issues a person-level mason license. A mason working for an employer needs no state card. A mason contracting on their own generally falls under state contractor licensing once jobs exceed a dollar threshold. California licenses masonry contractors through the Contractors State License Board under Classification C-29 Masonry (https://www.cslb.ca.gov). Florida issues a Specialty Masonry Contractor registration at the local (county/municipal) level rather than a statewide certified license; statewide certification covers Building Contractors and General Contractors under the Construction Industry Licensing Board (https://www.myfloridalicense.com/DBPR/construction-industry). North Carolina's Building Contractor license (Limited/Intermediate/Unlimited) covers masonry contracting above $40,000 through the NC Licensing Board for General Contractors (https://nclbgc.org). Texas and Illinois have no statewide masonry contractor license; rules are set by municipality. New York has no state mason license; New York City requires contractor business registration through the Department of Buildings (https://www.nyc.gov/site/buildings/index.page).
BAC / IMI APPRENTICESHIP
The International Union of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers (BAC) and the International Masonry Institute (IMI) jointly operate registered apprenticeship programs for the union craft (https://bacweb.org, https://imiweb.org). Apprenticeship is typically three years (roughly 4,800 to 6,000 on-the-job hours plus related technical instruction), with BAC Locals administering intake and IMI delivering technical training at regional training centers and the national John J. Flynn BAC/IMI International Training Center in Bowie, Maryland (https://imiweb.org/training). BAC recognizes distinct craft categories: bricklayer, stonemason, cement mason, plasterer, tile finisher/setter, terrazzo finisher/worker, marble mason, pointer/cleaner/caulker (PCC), and mosaic worker (https://bacweb.org/trades). IMI issues specialty craft certifications including the PCC (Pointing, Cleaning, and Caulking) program, tile and terrazzo certifications, and refractory credentials tracked in the DOL RAPIDS registered-apprenticeship system (https://www.apprenticeship.gov/apprenticeship-job-finder).
SPECIALTY SUBFIELDS
Refractory masonry covers high-temperature industrial linings in furnaces, boilers, coke ovens, cement kilns, and petrochemical units. BAC/IMI runs a dedicated refractory apprenticeship track administered through the International Council of Employers of Bricklayers and Allied Craftworkers (ICE) and IMI (https://imiweb.org). Refractory work often ties to shutdowns/turnarounds and pays travel and per-diem terms set by local collective bargaining agreements. Historic restoration is a second specialty track: BAC/IMI offers historic preservation and restoration training aligned with Secretary of the Interior's Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties (https://www.nps.gov/orgs/1739/secretary-standards.htm). PCC (pointer/cleaner/caulker) work is a BAC-recognized craft focused on repointing mortar joints, cleaning masonry facades, and sealant installation on existing structures (https://bacweb.org/trades). Tile, terrazzo, and marble finishing sit under separate BAC craft categories with their own apprenticeship curricula and IMI certification paths (https://imiweb.org/training).
SAFETY
Masonry work is covered by OSHA's Respirable Crystalline Silica standard for construction, 29 CFR 1926.1153 (https://www.osha.gov/silica-crystalline/construction). Cutting, grinding, chipping, or tuckpointing brick, block, concrete, stone, and mortar generates respirable silica. Employers must either follow Table 1 engineering-control and respirator specifications for listed tasks (wet cutting, integrated vacuum dust collection, enclosed cabs) or conduct exposure assessments under the alternative-exposure-control path (https://www.osha.gov/sites/default/files/publications/OSHA3902.pdf). The Permissible Exposure Limit is 50 micrograms per cubic meter (8-hour TWA) with an action level of 25 micrograms per cubic meter (https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1926/1926.1153). OSHA 10-hour Construction is a common site entry requirement; OSHA 30-hour is standard for foremen and lead masons (https://www.osha.gov/training/outreach). Scaffold user training under 29 CFR 1926.451 applies to nearly every commercial masonry job (https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1926/1926.451).
NON-UNION PATHWAY
The Mason Contractors Association of America (MCAA) is the principal non-union trade association and delivers the Masonry Skills Challenge, the Certified Masonry Estimator program, and the Masonry Foreman / Project Manager curriculum (https://masoncontractors.org). The National Concrete Masonry Association (NCMA) publishes technical design references (TEK notes) and runs training for concrete masonry unit (CMU) installation and dry-stack / ICF hybrid systems (https://ncma.org). NCCER publishes competency-based masonry curricula used by many trade schools and non-union employer training programs (https://www.nccer.org). Non-union masons can also pursue registered apprenticeship through non-BAC sponsors listed in the DOL RAPIDS finder (https://www.apprenticeship.gov/apprenticeship-job-finder). The BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook groups brickmasons, blockmasons, and stonemasons under SOC 47-2021 and describes entry through apprenticeship, technical school, or on-the-job training (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/construction-and-extraction/brickmasons-blockmasons-and-stonemasons.htm).