Trade licensing overview · millwright
How millwright licensing works — North Carolina
How this trade is regulated in North Carolina. none-in-pilot-states The framework below describes the national pathway most millwrights in North Carolina follow.
Millwrights are not state-licensed in any pilot state. Work authority flows from employer competency verification, registered apprenticeship completion, and task-specific certifications. Most notably, the United Brotherhood of Carpenters (UBC) Millwright apprenticeship, precision-machinery certifications through the Vibration Institute, and NCCCO rigger/signalperson credentials for crane work.
Millwright wages in North Carolina · 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 millwright earnings in North Carolina 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 North Carolina
Millwright work in North Carolina concentrates around the Toyota battery plant in Liberty (Randolph County), the Vinfast plant in Chatham County, BMW supplier and Spartanburg-adjacent supplier work along the I-85 corridor, biotech and pharmaceutical in the Research Triangle, food and beverage, paper and pulp, and the Wolfspeed (formerly Cree) semiconductor expansion in Siler City. Furniture has shrunk; advanced manufacturing has grown.
Where they work
Concentrations sit in the I-85 corridor (Charlotte, Greensboro, Burlington, Durham, Raleigh) for diversified manufacturing and battery plants; Randolph and Chatham counties for the Toyota battery and Vinfast plants; the Research Triangle (Raleigh, Durham, RTP) for biotech and pharma facility maintenance; Wilmington for chemical and pharmaceutical (GE Hitachi, Pfizer, Corning); the western Piedmont for food, glass, and paper; and the eastern coastal plain for food and chemical.
Pay context
North Carolina is not broken out for millwrights in the wages dataset shipped here. The BLS OES national median for millwrights (49-9044) was $63,990 as of May 2024. North Carolina wages typically sit at or modestly below national in industrial mechanic categories; Toyota battery and Vinfast plant build-out pay has bid up the regional rate. Cost of living near Charlotte and Raleigh runs near national; the rest of the state runs below. Check the BLS OES North Carolina table.
Training pathway
The North Carolina Community College System (Central Piedmont, Wake Tech, Forsyth Tech, Guilford Tech, Cape Fear, Randolph) runs industrial maintenance, mechatronics, and biotech-aligned programs that have placed millwrights into Toyota, Vinfast, and pharma plants. The Carolinas Carpenters Regional Council covers North Carolina millwright apprenticeships. NC State and the community colleges have strong workforce pipelines.
Considerations
If you want EV and battery plant install work in a region with active megaproject investment, central NC is among the busiest in the South. If you want union density at Midwest levels, look north. NC is right-to-work; union density is low. Cost of living in Charlotte and Raleigh has climbed; rural NC remains affordable.
North Carolina millwright snapshot
| MSA | Employed | Median wage |
|---|---|---|
| Charlotte-Concord-Gastonia, NC-SC | 310 | $63,780 |
| Greensboro-High Point, NC | 90 | $64,870 |
| Winston-Salem, NC | 60 | $65,150 |
| Greenville, NC | 50 | $59,130 |
| Wilmington, NC | 50 | $63,800 |
STATE LICENSE STATUS
No pilot state (TX, CA, FL, NY, IL) issues a person-level millwright license. The BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook entry for industrial machinery mechanics, machinery maintenance workers, and millwrights lists no state licensing requirement for the millwright occupation (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/installation-maintenance-and-repair/industrial-machinery-mechanics-and-maintenance-workers-and-millwrights.htm). Employer qualification, the shop's or contractor's demonstration that a worker can install, align, and maintain the specific machinery on site, governs day-to-day work authority. When a millwright performs adjacent tasks that do require a credential (welding to a pressure-vessel code, rigging a critical pick, operating a forklift), the credential attaches to that task, not to a statewide millwright trade license.
UBC MILLWRIGHT APPRENTICESHIP
The United Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America represents most union millwrights in the U.S. and Canada through its Millwright Regional Councils (https://www.carpenters.org/millwrights/). The UBC Millwright apprenticeship is a registered four-year program combining on-the-job training with classroom and hands-on instruction in precision machine installation, laser alignment, rigging, hydraulics, pneumatics, and welding (https://www.carpenters.org/millwrights/). Advanced and journey-level training is delivered at the International Training Center in Las Vegas, Nevada, where UBC operates a dedicated millwright training facility (https://carpenters.org/training/). Registered millwright apprenticeship sponsors are listed in the U.S. Department of Labor apprenticeship job finder (https://www.apprenticeship.gov/apprenticeship-job-finder).
PRECISION CERTIFICATIONS
Precision machinery work is credentialed task-by-task through private certifying bodies. The Vibration Institute offers four categories of Vibration Analyst certification (Category I through Category IV) aligned to ISO 18436-2, covering data collection, spectrum analysis, advanced diagnostics, and corrective techniques (https://www.vibinst.org/). Laser-alignment proficiency is typically documented through manufacturer training from SKF (https://www.skf.com) and Pruftechnik / Easylaser (https://www.pruftechnik.com). Dynamic balancing, ultrasonic bearing lubrication, and condition-monitoring courses are offered by the Vibration Institute and by equipment OEMs. None of these certifications is a state license. They are employer- and project-recognized credentials that document competency on specific precision tasks.
RIGGING / NCCCO
Most millwright work involves moving heavy machinery, which brings rigging and crane-signaling requirements under federal law. OSHA 29 CFR 1926 Subpart CC, Cranes and Derricks in Construction, requires that signalpersons and riggers used in assembly/disassembly or in hoisting operations be qualified (https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/regulations/standardnumber/1926/1926SubpartCC). The National Commission for the Certification of Crane Operators (NCCCO) issues the most widely accepted credentials: Rigger Level I, Rigger Level II, and Signalperson, each requiring written and practical examinations (https://www.nccco.org). Rigger and signalperson certifications are renewed on a five-year cycle per NCCCO (https://www.nccco.org). A millwright performing critical-lift rigging on a construction site generally carries at least NCCCO Rigger I and Signalperson, plus employer-specific qualification for the lift plan.
NON-UNION PATHWAY
Non-union millwrights typically enter through in-house training programs at large industrial employers (power generation, auto assembly, pulp and paper, food processing, and petrochemical plants) or through community and technical college associate degree programs in industrial maintenance, industrial mechanics, or mechatronics. BLS OOH describes entry through postsecondary nondegree awards and on-the-job training alongside registered apprenticeship (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/installation-maintenance-and-repair/industrial-machinery-mechanics-and-maintenance-workers-and-millwrights.htm). Non-union millwrights pursue the same precision certifications as union members (Vibration Institute analyst levels, laser-alignment training, NCCCO rigger/signalperson) because the credentials are employer-recognized regardless of representation. The DOL apprenticeship finder lists non-union registered sponsors alongside UBC locals (https://www.apprenticeship.gov/apprenticeship-job-finder).