If you’re stuck in a job you don’t love or you’re starting from absolute zero, I’m laying out a straight‑talk blueprint you can follow to go from apprentice to top earner in the plumbing trade. We’ll cover how to land your first apprenticeship, what to say in the interview with no experience, the tools worth buying first, the daily habits that separate slow learners from fast movers, and the specific ways plumbers break six figures—ethically and sustainably.
Why the Trades Are the Best Opportunity Right Now
Before I ever grabbed a pipe wrench, I was drifting. No degree. No special skills. A friend mentioned his dad and uncles were plumbers—they owned homes, drove decent trucks, and loved what they did. That planted the seed. When I looked around, it was obvious: the world needs more skilled tradespeople, and it needs them now. For every crew leader hanging up his tools, there aren’t enough new hands replacing him. In many places the average tradesperson is in the late 50s. That means opportunity isn’t coming “someday”—it’s sitting in the gang box waiting for someone willing to show up and learn.
The Mindset Shift That Makes Everything Else Work
Your first asset isn’t knowledge. It’s the attitude.
- Decide. Every career pivots on a single day—the day you decide to bet on yourself.
- Be coachable. Some journeymen are natural teachers; some aren’t. Either way, you learn.
- Own the grunt work. Carrying pipe, fetching fittings, cleaning up—done fast and done right—buys you access to the next responsibility.
- Track your progress. Keep a pocket notebook. At the end of each day, write: what I did, what I learned, what I’ll do better tomorrow.
When I started, I asked for a little more than the posted starting wage. The foreman told me to put down $4.25 per hour; I wrote in $4.75 and got it. That extra 50 cents was maybe twenty bucks a week, but it taught me something important: show your value, ask with respect, and back it up with work.
The Zero‑to‑$100k Path (Six Stages)
1) Get in the Door: Landing an Apprenticeship
You don’t need experience to get your first plumbing job. You need reliability and proof you can learn.
Where to apply
- Local plumbing companies (residential service and commercial construction)
- Mechanical contractors
- Union training centers and non‑union apprenticeship programs
- Supply houses—great for networking even if you start in delivery
What to bring
- Clean, simple resume (punctuality, sports, military, warehouse, restaurant—anything showing grit)
- Driver’s license and clean driving record if you have it
- Steel‑toe boots, basic PPE (glasses, gloves), and a small notebook—signal you’re ready to work
What to say (script you can use)
“I’m brand new to plumbing, but I’m reliable, I learn fast, and I’m willing to start with the hard jobs. I’ll be early every day, I’ll keep a notebook so I don’t ask the same question twice, and I’m looking for a place where I can grow into more responsibility. If you give me a clear target for 30, 60, and 90 days, I’ll hit it.”
How to talk pay when you have no experience
“Would you be open to starting me at $X with a written review at 60 and 90 days tied to specific skills? If I hit the mark, we bump the rate. If I don’t, we keep talking.”
Managers love clarity and initiative. Show them both.
2) The First Year: Learn Faster Than Everyone Else
Your first year is the “grind” year. Many quit here because they don’t see immediate rewards. Don’t. This is where you build the base that pays you forever.
Daily checklist
- Be 15 minutes early.
- Ask your lead, “What’s the goal for today, and how will we know we hit it?”
- Carry more than you’re asked to.
- Stage materials for the next task without being told.
- Clean as you go; leave a room better than you found it.
- Write down fittings, pipe sizes, and terms you heard. Look them up that night.
Weekly goals
- Week 1–2: Tool ID, safety, jobsite etiquette, how to stage and clean.
- Week 3–4: PVC/CPVC/PEX basics, solvent welding, press tools, pipe supports and spacing.
- Month 2–3: Drain/waste/vent (DWV) layout, slope, traps, venting.
- Month 4–6: Rough‑in for bathrooms and kitchens, reading simple floor plans, measuring and drilling safely.
- Month 7–12: Water heater basics, fixture setting, leak testing, service call ride‑alongs to observe diagnostics.
The moment it clicks
Somewhere around month 9–12, the system stops looking like random parts. You’ll see the whole puzzle—how supply meets fixture, how drains breathe, why venting matters. That’s the day your value jumps and your foreman starts handing you real responsibility.
3) Build a Foundation of Core Skills
- Measuring and layout: Centerlines, offsets, fall on drains, framing considerations.
- Cutting and joining: Copper soldering/brazing, PEX pressing, PVC solvent welding, threaded steel, cast‑iron no‑hub.
- Code basics: Clearances for water heaters and fixtures, support spacing, proper venting, safe combustion air.
- Diagnostics: Reading a water meter, finding a slab leak, chasing low pressure, isolating a clogged vent.
- Customer communication: Explaining options and costs in plain English, getting a signature before work, documenting with photos.
Master these and you become the apprentice everyone wants on their crew.
4) The First Tools to Buy (Start Small, Buy Once)
You don’t need a truckload of tools to begin. Start with a tight kit you’ll use daily:
- 12″ and 14″ adjustable wrenches
- 14″ and 18″ pipe wrenches
- Tongue‑and‑groove pliers (two sizes)
- Tape measure and torpedo level
- Utility knife and a good marker
- Tubing cutter (copper) and ratcheting PVC cutter
- Headlamp and safety glasses
- Gloves and hearing protection
- A 5‑gallon bucket (carry, stage, and sit on it)
As you advance, add a cordless drill/driver, hole saws, press tool (if your company doesn’t supply one), and a multimeter if you cross into a water heater and recirc work. Focus on durable tools—not gimmicks—and mark them with your initials.
5) Turn Learning Into Raises and Bigger Checks
You earn more when you reduce callbacks, finish work faster, and make your lead’s life easier. Make progress visible.
- Skill checklists: Ask your foreman what three skills will get you a raise. Write them down. When you can do each unsupervised, ask for the review you agreed to.
- Own a scope: Become the “water‑heater apprentice,” the “rough‑in ace,” or the “fixture‑setting machine.” Specialists get tapped first.
- Document results: Keep photos of clean installs, passed inspections, and before/after shots. That becomes your case for pay bumps.
6) Choose Your Lane to Six Figures
There isn’t one path to $100k. There are several. Pick the one that fits your strengths and life.
Lane A: Commercial/Industrial with Overtime
- Base scenario: $28/hour base, 40 hours/week → $58,240/year.
- Add overtime: 10 hours/week at time‑and‑a‑half ($42/hour) → 520 hours × $42 = $21,840.
- Total: $80,080.
- After your license bump: $32/hour base → $66,560. Same overtime at $48/hour → $24,960.
- New total: $91,520.
- Add modest on‑call: 4 extra hours/week at $48/hour → $9,984.
- Grand total: $101,504.
That’s without changing companies—just stacking skills, a license, and predictable overtime.
Lane B: Residential Service with Performance Pay
- Base: $30/hour → $62,400/year.
- Performance/commission: Average $400/week for add‑ons, replacements, or service agreements → $20,800.
- On‑call: 5 hours/week at time‑and‑a‑half ($45/hour) → 260 hours × $45 = $11,700.
- Total: $94,900.
- Two water‑heater replacements/month with a $250 spiff: 24 × $250 = $6,000.
- Grand total: $100,900.
Service rewards communication and problem‑solving. The better you are at explaining options (repair vs. replace, good/better/best), the better your paycheck.
Lane C: Owner‑Operator (After You’re Licensed and Seasoned)
- Billable time: 5 hours/day × $150/hour × 5 days × 50 weeks = $187,500 in labor revenue.
- Materials margin: Modest markup can add several thousand more.
- Expenses: Vehicle, fuel, insurance, tools, marketing, software, accounting—easily $40k–$60k/year.
- Net before taxes: Often over $100k if you keep overhead lean and schedule tight.
Ownership isn’t step one, but it’s a real destination for those who like sales, systems, and leadership.
What to Say in an Interview When You Have Zero Experience
You don’t need buzzwords. You need proof you’ll lower headaches and raise standards.
Open strong
- “I’m new to plumbing, but I’m dependable, I’m early, and I’m respectful of customers and crews. Give me a clear checklist for the first 90 days, and I’ll hit it.”
Highlight habits that matter
- Reliable transportation and clean driving record if you have it
- No drama, no phone on the job
- Willing to start with cleanup, hauling, and material runs
- Ready to learn codes and safety from day one
Ask great questions
- “What does a successful apprentice look like at 30, 60, and 90 days here?”
- “Which three skills earn raises fastest in your company?”
- “Who’s the best apprentice you’ve had and what made them great?”
Close with clarity
- “If I meet the 90‑day targets, can we schedule a pay review now? I want to be accountable to a standard, not just time served.”
A 90‑Day Sprint Plan (Day‑One to “You’re Getting It”)
Days 1–10: Safety and Setup
- PPE dialed in, ladders and lifts 101, lockout/tagout basics
- Learn pipe, fittings, and fastener names
- How to stage materials for tomorrow’s work
Days 11–30: Cutting and Joining
- PVC solvent welding that never leaks
- Copper soldering fundamentals (clean, flux, heat control, flow)
- Press systems and torque specs
- Daily habit: draw and label yesterday’s assembly from memory
Days 31–60: DWV and Rough‑In
- Minimum slope, trap arms, venting rules
- Drilling and notching without weakening framing
- Layout for bathroom groups (WC, lav, tub/shower)
Days 61–90: Fixtures and Finishes
- Setting toilets, lavs, and kitchen sinks cleanly
- Supply stops, traps, escutcheons—clean lines and symmetry
- Customer‑ready cleanup and photo documentation
Bring this plan to your foreman. Ask for feedback and adjust it to the exact work your company does.
The Habits That Make You Promotion‑Proof
- Learn the prints. If your lead is looking at floor plans, stand where you can see and listen. When you’re off the clock, learn the symbols and abbreviations.
- Stage like a pro. Tomorrow’s fittings in labeled buckets, pipe pre‑cut, holes marked. Preparation makes you look faster than you are.
- Fix small problems silently. Loose escutcheon? Misaligned strap? If you can safely correct it, do it.
- Communicate early. If something’s off—wrong rough‑in height, framing change—flag it immediately. Early communication saves money and builds trust.
- Own your mistakes. Everyone makes them. Fewer people admit them quickly and fix them thoroughly.
The First Five Tools Every New Apprentice Should Prioritize
You heard the shortlist earlier, but here’s how to think about each:
- Pipe wrenches (14″ and 18″): Your leverage. Keep them clean and jaw‑sharp.
- Tongue‑and‑groove pliers: Two sizes let you grab, hold, and tighten most things you touch.
- Tape measure and torpedo level: Straight, plumb, and level work separates pros from hacks.
- Cutters: A sharp tubing cutter for copper and a ratcheting PVC cutter for plastic keep your joints clean.
- Lighting and PPE: A headlamp saves your neck. Safety glasses save your eyes. Both pay for themselves the first time they prevent a mistake.
Buy once, cry once. Mark your tools. Guard them.
Common Mistakes That Keep New Plumbers Stuck
- Quitting before it clicks. The puzzle takes months to reveal itself. Stay the course.
- Asking the same question twice. That’s what your notebook prevents.
- Messy work area. Cleanliness is craftsmanship.
- Ignoring slope and venting. These are the silent sources of callbacks.
- Skipping tests. Water and air tests uncover problems when they’re cheap to fix.
- Poor customer manners. Shoes off, drop clothes down, explain the plan, clean the area—basic respect gets referrals and reviews.
From Apprentice to Leader (and Beyond)
Think of your career in steps:
- Apprentice: Learn, carry, cut, clean, ask good questions.
- Journeyman/License: Work unsupervised, pass inspections, train apprentices.
- Foreman: Plan the day, stage crews, hit schedules.
- Superintendent/Estimator: Manage multiple jobs, budgets, and manpower.
- Owner/Operator: Sell, schedule, deliver, and grow.
At each step, the formula is the same: clarity + responsibility + results. Decide where you want to land and reverse‑engineer the skills you’ll need.
What Six‑Figure Plumbers Actually Value
Forget Lamborghinis. Think work vans and well‑stocked toolboxes. Think less stress about the next paycheck, a safer home for your family, and the pride of solving problems people truly need fixed. The trade gives you freedom: the freedom to pick your lane, the freedom to build something with your hands and your name, and the freedom to turn effort into earnings.
Your Blueprint—Simple, Not Easy
- Make the decision. Today. Not next month.
- Get hired as an apprentice. Bring the script, the attitude, the notebook.
- Survive and thrive in Year One. Out‑learn and out‑prepare everyone.
- Stack skills. Rough‑in, DWV, finishes, diagnostics, communication.
- Make your value visible. Photos, passed inspections, fewer callbacks.
- Pick your lane to $100k. Overtime, service with performance pay, or ownership.
- Keep going. The trade rewards those who stick with it.
Conclusion
How to go from $0 to $100k/Year Plumbing With NO Experience comes down to choosing the path, embracing the grind, and learning faster than the next person. You don’t need perfect grades or fancy credentials to start. You need the courage to raise your hand for the hard jobs, the humility to be taught, and the discipline to keep showing up when it’s cold, hot, heavy, or frustrating. The day will come when the system clicks—when you see the puzzle and can assemble it without being told. That’s when your income stops inching and starts jumping. Decide, get in, learn hard, and build the career you and your family deserve.