Occupational Wages in Northwest Oregon in 2020
September 9, 2020 The average wage in Northwest Oregon is lower than the statewide average, but much of the difference is due to the prevalence of lower-wage occupations in the area – the most common occupation in the region is fast food and counter workers followed by retail salespersons. When comparing wages for the same occupations, Northwest Oregon is closer to statewide levels than the average difference would suggest, and many local occupations even pay more than is typical for the state.The Oregon Employment Department estimates wages for more than 400 occupations in Benton, Clatsop, Columbia, Lincoln and Tillamook counties combined. The highest-paying occupation in the region with a published wage was obstetricians and gynecologists which had an estimated annual average wage of $285,230 in 2020. Most of the occupations with higher wages were in medicine, management, or computers, although some specialty occupations such as judges, wholesale sales representatives, lawyers, engineers, and electric power-line installers, earned more than $90,000 per year. The lowest wages, $26,416 and $26,541, were for ushers and food preparation workers, respectively. Childcare workers were also near the bottom of the wage ranks with an annual average wage of $27,768.
Occupational wages in Northwest Oregon are estimated from a survey of local employers. Wages for many different occupations in the region are available – the exact number differs each year. This article presents the 2020 wages for selected occupations in the region.
Not all occupations in the region have published wages. This may be the case for confidentiality reasons (only one or two firms employ an occupation), if only a few employees work in the occupation (too few in the sample), if the occupation is primarily self-employed (such as farmers), for some occupations if the wage is more than $208,000 per year, or if the wages reported in the sample for Northwest Oregon are substantially different than those for other regions (an indication of poor data quality).
It may also be the case that wages for very specific occupations are not reported. For example, the wages for registered nurses are reported but the wage survey doesn’t distinguish between operating room nurses and cardiac care nurses.
Wages for Selected Occupations
Not only are occupational wages sometimes lower in Northwest Oregon, but the region has many jobs in low-wage occupations. As noted, the most common occupation is fast food and counter workers. Retail salespersons, cashiers, waiters and waitresses, maids and housekeeping cleaners, and cooks are other common occupations.

Wages for Broad Occupational Groups
Reviewing occupational wages is a useful step in planning a career. The table below presents the size and average wages for broad occupational groups instead of for specific occupations. Healthcare practitioners, management, engineering, and computer groups lead the wage list and had wages that were as much as twice the average for all occupations. Many of the specific occupations in these top groups require advanced education and training. Unfortunately, with the exception of health care practitioners and management, these occupational groups aren’t dominant in Northwest Oregon’s economy. Computer and engineering occupational groups provide fewer than 2,000 jobs each.

Occupational Wages
Wage data presented here are collected through the Occupational Employment Survey (OES), a semi-annual survey measuring occupational employment and wage rates for payroll workers by industry. In Oregon, the survey samples more than 6,000 establishments a year, taking three years to fully collect the sample of 19,000 establishments.
The OES survey defines employment as workers covered by unemployment insurance. Wages are straight-time gross pay excluding premium pay and nonwage fringe benefits. Base pay rates, tips, commissions and certain types of production bonuses are included. Exclusions include overtime pay, housing allowances and nonproduction bonuses.
More detailed information is available in the Oregon Wage Information publication that is updated each June at www.QualityInfo.org.