Maintenance & Reliability
.
Manufacturing

Digital Maintenance Technician

Also posted as Also posted as: Digital Maintenance Tech, Specialist, Maintenance Tech, Service Tech

Median wage range
$65k–$85k
National median · per year
Outlook
Growing
Entry barrier
Associate or cert
Two-year degree common, not required
Overview

What is a Digital Maintenance Technician

A digital maintenance technician uses condition data, inspections, and analysis to catch equipment problems before they become downtime, shifting maintenance from reactive to predictive. It's a hands-on job across plants and asset fleets, and many people start with a two-year associate degree or a focused certificate rather than a four-year degree.

Digital Maintenance Technician
Role Snapshot

The role profile

Everything you need to know about this role, the same details employers use to post openings and colleges use to build training.

Median wage range
$65k–$85k
Typical annual pay based on national and industry data.
O*NET codes
17-3029.0049-9041.00
Primary and secondary occupational codes mapping this role to national labor data.
Cluster type
Manufacturing
The broader industry group this role belongs to within the technician economy.
Context tags
Where and how this role is commonly applied.
Core skills
DiagnosticsDataSensors
Essential competencies to perform this role effectively.
Canonical Role ID
UNMUDL-TECH-096
A unique identifier linking this role across training, jobs, and employer systems.
Pay & Outlook

How much does it pay?

Digital Maintenance Technician in this role earns a median of $65k–$85k a year. Here's how pay typically grows with experience.

$65k–$85k
National median annual wage range. Technicians certified in vibration analysis or reliability practice typically earn at the higher end.
Wage ranges are illustrative, based on national and industry data. Actual pay varies by employer, location, certification, and experience.
Entry
Experienced
Specialized
On The Job

What does a Digital Maintenance Technician do?

Explore the core responsibilities of this role, from daily operations and equipment handling to safety, quality, and performance requirements.

01

Monitor equipment condition

Use vibration, thermal, and sensor data to spot developing failures.

02

Analyze and prioritize

Turn condition data into ranked, actionable maintenance work.

03

Run precision maintenance

Execute alignment, balancing, and corrective work that extends asset life.

04

Prove the results

Track downtime and reliability metrics to show what the program saves.

Skills You Will Build

What skills do you need?

Three core skills sit at the heart of this role. You can learn all of them through short, hands-on training.

Diagnostics

Systematically isolating faults using test equipment, software tools, and logic.

Data

Collecting, checking, and using operational data to spot issues and improve performance.

Sensors

Installing and troubleshooting the sensors that give machines their senses.

Your next step

How to become one.

Take a short, hands-on course to build the core skills, then apply to jobs hiring near you, all in one place, powered by the Unmudl Skills-to-Jobs® Network.

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Common Questions

Digital Maintenance Technician, FAQ

A digital maintenance technician uses condition data, inspections, and analysis to catch equipment problems before they become downtime, shifting maintenance from reactive to predictive. It's hands-on work across plants and asset fleets.
The median wage range is about $65,000–$85,000 per year. Entry-level roles start near $65,000, and technicians certified in vibration analysis or reliability practice often earn toward the top of the range. Pay varies by employer, location, and experience.
Most people start with a two-year associate degree or a focused certificate program. You can find training on Unmudl to build the core skills, Diagnostics, Data, and Sensors, then apply to open roles.
A four-year degree is not required. Many employers look for a two-year associate degree or a strong certificate plus hands-on experience, and demonstrated technical skill often matters more than the credential itself.
It's an in-demand role with a clear path to higher pay through experience and specialization. Growing alongside advanced manufacturing and automation investment (BLS 2024-34). The skills also transfer to related roles like predictive maintenance technician and reliability technician.

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