Physicists in Oklahoma
Is Oklahoma a good place for you to work as a Physicist?
You’re in luck! Jobs for Physicists in Oklahoma are projected to grow and these jobs tend to pay higher than average.
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Projected employment for Physicists in Oklahoma is growing faster than average.
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Physicists in Oklahoma earn higher salaries than the typical U.S. wage earner.
What Major Will Prepare You For a Physicist Career?
- Engineering
- Engineering Physics
- Engineering & Applied Physics
- Physical Sciences
- Astronomy & Astrophysics
- Astrophysics
- Physics
- General Physics
- Atomic/Molecular Physics
- Elementary Particle Physics
- Plasma & High-Temperature Physics
- Nuclear Physics
- Optics/Optical Sciences
- Condensed Matter & Materials Physics
- Acoustics
- Theoretical & Mathematical Physics
- Other Physics
- Health Professions
- Public Health
- Health/Medical Physics
How Many Physicists Work in Oklahoma?
40 people worked as Physicists in 2018 in this state.
There were 50 Physicists employed in this state in 2017.
That’s a decline of 10 jobs between 2017 and 2018.
The typical state has 220 Physicists working in it, which means Oklahoma has fewer Physicists than average.
Job Projections for Oklahoma
Jobs for Physicists in this state are growing at a rate of 16.7% which is faster than the nationwide estimated projection of 14.5%.
Oklahoma Annual Job Openings
The BLS is projecting 10 annual Physicists job openings in Oklahoma, and 70 total jobs in the year 2026.
Nationwide, the prediction is 1,700 annual jobs and 20,500 total jobs in 2026.
What do Physicists Make in Oklahoma?
In 2018 wages for Physicists ranged from $61,570 to $208,000 with $170,280 being the median annual salary.
Broken down to an hourly rate, workers in this field made anywhere from $29.6 to $100. The median hourly rate was $81.86.
In 2017 the median pay for this field was $78.94 an hour.
The hourly rate grew by $2.92.
The median salary in Oklahoma is higher than the nationwide median salary.
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Top States for Physicists Employment
The table below shows the states where most Physicists work.
State | Number Employed | Annual Median Salary |
---|---|---|
California | 3,200 | $112,980 |
Maryland | 1,950 | $125,660 |
New Mexico | 1,770 | $148,620 |
Texas | 1,000 | $112,420 |
New York | 950 | $126,740 |
Colorado | 930 | $100,850 |
Illinois | 810 | $111,160 |
Virginia | 750 | $102,220 |
District of Columbia | 670 | $146,890 |
Michigan | 510 | $81,650 |
Washington | 500 | $103,900 |
Ohio | 440 | $117,870 |
Tennessee | 440 | $126,500 |
New Jersey | 370 | $119,930 |
Massachusetts | 360 | $145,570 |
North Carolina | 330 | $133,650 |
Pennsylvania | 320 | $132,410 |
Indiana | 260 | $0 |
Florida | 240 | $124,070 |
South Carolina | 200 | $104,700 |
Below are the states where Physicists get paid the most:
State | Annual Median Salary |
---|---|
Oklahoma | $170,280 |
Wisconsin | $154,070 |
New Mexico | $148,620 |
District of Columbia | $146,890 |
Massachusetts | $145,570 |
Utah | $138,100 |
North Carolina | $133,650 |
Pennsylvania | $132,410 |
Minnesota | $128,110 |
Louisiana | $127,630 |
References
- Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS)
- College Factual
- National Center for Education Statistics
- O*NET Online
- Image Credit: By A. T. Service under License
More about our data sources and methodologies.