Local Salary Data

Law Teachers, Postsecondary Salary in California

Local DOL filings vs national average, with cost-of-living-adjusted purchasing power.

Local Median
$95,229
30 filings
DOL Median (California)
$95,229
vs National
-17.2%
National: $115,000
BLS Median (area)
N/A
COL-Adjusted
$68,757
Purchasing power equiv.

Salary Comparison

This Location (DOL)
$95,229
-17.2% vs national
National Average (DOL)
$115,000
Baseline
BLS Estimate (This Area)
N/A
No comparison

Purchasing Power Analysis

A Law Teachers, Postsecondary in California earns $95,229 in nominal terms, which is 17.2% below the national average of $115,000. After adjusting for the local cost of living (index 138.5 vs national 100), this is equivalent to $68,757 in national-average purchasing power.

Tax differences are not included. Only cost-of-living index adjustments are applied.

Top Employers in California

Explore More

All Law Teachers, Postsecondary data All salaries in California Best cities for this role

Top-Paying Metros for Law Teachers, Postsecondary

Minneapolis, MN · $275,392Lincoln, NE · $269,194Austin, TX · $217,000Central Islip, NY · $208,000New Haven, CT · $200,000

Top-Paying Roles in California

Cardiologists · $600,000Physicians, All Other · $301,642General Internal Medicine Physicians · $300,000Pediatricians, General · $254,000Psychiatrists · $237,350

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a Law Teachers, Postsecondary make in California?

The median Law Teachers, Postsecondary salary in California is $95,229 based on 30 DOL filings.

Is California a good place to work as a Law Teachers, Postsecondary?

A Law Teachers, Postsecondary in California earns 17.2% less than the national median of $115,000, or $68,757 after adjusting for the local cost of living.

Job Search

Find Open Positions

Browse current openings and compare them against the government-filed salary data above.

Source: US Department of Labor, Office of Foreign Labor Certification (OFLC) public disclosure files (PERM Form ETA-9089 and LCA Form ETA-9035), and US Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS). Salary figures represent employer filings and government survey estimates, not individual worker pay.