VT · Machinist

Machinist licensing in Vermont

State-issued license classes for machinists in Vermont. Each class links to the issuing state board for primary-source verification.

Trade licensing overview · machinist

How machinist licensing works — Vermont

How this trade is regulated in Vermont. none-in-pilot-states The framework below describes the national pathway most machinists in Vermont follow.

Machinists are not state-licensed in the United States. Competency is demonstrated through NIMS (National Institute for Metalworking Skills) credentials, employer-administered machining and inspection tests, or completion of a DOL-registered Machinist apprenticeship.

Machinist wages in Vermont · BLS OES A01 2024

State median
$49,040
-12.7% vs national median
State mean
$56,060
National median
$56,150

Wages are state-level annual figures from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program (A01 2024). Specific machinist earnings in Vermont 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 Vermont

Vermont machining is small, tied to GlobalFoundries semiconductor-equipment work in Essex Junction, BAE Systems defense electronics in Hinesburg, small precision job shops, and instrument-shop work. There is no large aerospace or production-manufacturing base; specialty depth concentrates around the semiconductor and defense employers in Chittenden County.

Where they work

Chittenden County (Burlington, Essex Junction, Williston) holds the densest base, with GlobalFoundries semiconductor-equipment machining and BAE Systems Hinesburg. Springfield and the precision-machining valley along the Connecticut River retain a legacy of small precision shops dating to the historic Vermont machine-tool industry. Rutland and central Vermont hold smaller supplier and aerospace-supplier shops. The Northeast Kingdom is thin outside of forest-products equipment work.

Pay context

BLS OES reports a Vermont median of $49,040 for machinists. GlobalFoundries and BAE Hinesburg anchor the upper end of the range; the statewide number is pulled down by smaller supplier shops. Cost of housing in Chittenden County has risen sharply; the rest of Vermont remains below national averages.

Training pathway

Vermont Technical College (Randolph Center) runs a manufacturing technology program. Community College of Vermont offers limited related coursework. Vermont Adult Career and Technical Education centers in Springfield, Rutland, and Burlington run short-cycle CNC training. The Vermont Department of Labor's Apprenticeship Program registers machinist apprenticeships through specific employers including GlobalFoundries and BAE.

Considerations

If you want semiconductor-equipment or defense-electronics machining in a small-state environment, Chittenden County and the Springfield valley are credible options with employer-specific training. If you want production-manufacturing variety or aerospace-prime work, Vermont is thin and most career-stage machinists migrate to New Hampshire or Massachusetts. Cost of housing in Chittenden County and winter conditions should factor into relocation.

Vermont machinist snapshot

State employment (BLS)
380
10-year growth (20222032)
+0.0%
~30 openings/yr
Top metro areas in Vermont by employment
MSAEmployedMedian wage
Burlington-South Burlington, VT100$50,580

STATE LICENSE STATUS

No pilot state (TX, CA, FL, NY, IL) issues a person-level machinist license. The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics classifies machinists under SOC 51-4041 and lists typical entry through long-term on-the-job training, apprenticeship, or community-college machine-tool programs (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/production/machinists-and-tool-and-die-makers.htm). Because there is no statutory license, hiring shops typically verify skill through a bench test, print-reading and GD&T questions, and (increasingly) NIMS credential records (https://www.nims-skills.org). ITAR-regulated aerospace and defense shops add employer-specific background and citizenship checks per 22 CFR 120-130; those are job requirements, not state licenses.

NIMS CREDENTIALS

NIMS (National Institute for Metalworking Skills) issues 52 stackable, ANSI-accredited credentials covering Machining Level I, II, and III; CNC Milling and CNC Turning Operator and Programmer; Tool & Die; Mold Making; Stamping; Grinding; and Industrial Technology Maintenance (https://www.nims-skills.org/credentialing). Each credential requires an online theory exam plus a performance/part-inspection component verified by a NIMS-credentialed evaluator (https://www.nims-skills.org). Machining Level I is the recognized entry credential and is used by many registered apprenticeships as a first-year benchmark. NIMS credentials are accepted as Related Technical Instruction (RTI) evidence by many DOL-registered Machinist programs (https://www.apprenticeship.gov). The International Machine Tool Manufacturers Association (IMTMA, https://www.imtma.org) and the National Tooling and Machining Association (NTMA, https://www.ntma.org) both reference NIMS as the industry-standard skills benchmark.

CNC PROGRAMMING

CNC (computer numerical control) programming is the core skill for production machining. G-code and M-code fundamentals (ISO 6983 / EIA RS-274) are the baseline language read by Fanuc, Siemens, Haas, and Mazak controls (https://www.iso.org/standard/34608.html). Most production programs are generated in CAM software: Mastercam (https://www.mastercam.com), Autodesk Fusion 360 (https://www.autodesk.com/products/fusion-360), and SolidWorks CAM (https://www.solidworks.com) are the most commonly listed in BLS machinist job postings (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/production/machinists-and-tool-and-die-makers.htm). 5-axis simultaneous programming is typical in aerospace structural and impeller work and is covered by NIMS CNC Milling Programmer Level III (https://www.nims-skills.org/credentialing). NIMS also offers a stand-alone Job Planning, Benchwork, and Layout credential that is a prerequisite for Machining Levels II and III.

APPRENTICESHIP PATHWAY

The U.S. Department of Labor registers Machinist apprenticeships under RAPIDS occupation code 0296 with a typical term of 8,000 on-the-job-training hours plus 576 hours of Related Technical Instruction; Tool and Die Maker (RAPIDS 0295) typically requires 10,000 OJT hours (https://www.apprenticeship.gov/apprenticeship-job-finder). Community-college Associate of Applied Science (AAS) degrees in Machine Tool Technology are a common parallel or substitute pathway and frequently articulate into NIMS credentials. The International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM, https://goiam.org) represents machinists in parts of aerospace, defense, and rail, though most U.S. production machinists work in non-union shops. NTMA and the Precision Metalforming Association (PMA) both sponsor employer-led apprenticeships registered through DOL.

ADJACENT ROLES

Tool-and-die maker is the most demanding adjacent role, requiring roughly 10,000 OJT hours and tight-tolerance grinding, heat-treat, and fixture-building experience (https://www.bls.gov/ooh/production/machinists-and-tool-and-die-makers.htm). CNC programmer roles split into shop-floor edit/offset programmers and off-line CAM programmers; NIMS CNC Milling and CNC Turning Programmer credentials cover both (https://www.nims-skills.org/credentialing). Manual mill and lathe operator positions are still common in prototype, R&D, and repair shops. Quality-control and gauge inspector roles require formal GD&T training per ASME Y14.5-2018, Dimensioning and Tolerancing (https://www.asme.org/codes-standards/find-codes-standards/y14-5-dimensioning-tolerancing); ASME also publishes Y14.5.1 Mathematical Definition of Dimensioning and Tolerancing Principles. AS9100 (aerospace) and ISO 13485 (medical device) quality-system training are often required before a machinist is cleared to run regulated parts.

Not legal, financial, or career advice. Trades Navigator compiles state board rules, statutes, and federal data into a navigable layer linked to primary sources. We do not maintain editorial attestation on each line. Always verify the specific number, fee, deadline, or rule against the linked primary source before relying on it. Confirm any decision with the relevant state agency, a lawyer, or an accountant.

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