Music Teacher Salary
Real, self-reported pay data from Music Teachers across the US — 6 submissions and counting.
Music Teacher Salaries
| Date ↓ | State | Position | Salary | Education | Exp. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Today | Texas | High School | $73,000 | Master's | 9yr |
| Yesterday | New York | High School | $70,000 | Master's | 14yr |
| 11d ago | Arizona | Specialist | $64,000 | Bachelor's | 2yr |
| 11d ago | Pennsylvania | Specialist | $60,000 | Bachelor's | 7yr |
| 16d ago | North Dakota | Elementary | $49,800 | Bachelor's | 0yr |
| 16d ago | Washington | Middle School | $105,000 | Master's | 7yr |
People Also Ask
How much does a Music Teacher make?+
Based on self-reported salaries on TeacherSalary.org, the average Music Teacher salary in the US is $70,300. Pay varies significantly by state, district, and years of experience.
What state pays Music Teachers the most?+
Among states with reported data, Texas has the most Music Teacher submissions. California, Washington, and New York typically offer the highest teacher salaries nationally.
What degree do you need to be a Music Teacher?+
Most public school Music Teacher positions require at minimum a bachelor's degree plus a state teaching license. Many districts pay higher on the salary schedule for a master's degree or additional graduate credits.
Is Music Teacher a good career?+
Teaching offers strong job stability, summers off, and defined-benefit pension plans in most states. Salary has historically lagged other degree-requiring professions, but benefits, schedule, and job security make it attractive for many. Use this database to compare pay in specific states and districts before accepting a position.
What is the starting salary for a Music Teacher?+
Starting salaries for Music Teachers vary widely — from around $35,000 in some Southern states to over $60,000 in California, New York, and Washington. A teacher with a bachelor's degree and no experience typically starts at the bottom of the district's salary schedule.
Do Music Teachers get a pension?+
Most public school Music Teachers are enrolled in their state's defined-benefit pension system. Pension vesting typically requires 5–10 years of service. Teachers at private or charter schools may not be covered by the state pension.
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