Automotive Service Technicians and Mechanics

Moderate Risk
44%

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AUTOMATION RISK
CALCULATED
58%
(Moderate Risk)
POLLING
30%
(Low Risk, Based on 573 votes)
Average: 44%
LABOR DEMAND
GROWTH
2.7%
by year 2033
WAGES
$47,770
or $22.96 per hour
Volume
676,570
as of 2023
SUMMARY
What does this snowflake show?
The Snowflake is a visual summary of the five badges: Automation Risk (calculated), Risk (polled), Growth, Wages and Volume. It gives you an instant snapshot of an occupations profile. The colour of the Snowflake relates to its size. The better the occupation scores in relation to others, the larger and greener the Snowflake becomes.
JOB SCORE
4.9/10
What's this?
Job Score (higher is better):

We rate jobs using four factors. These are:

- Chance of being automated
- Job growth
- Wages
- Volume of available positions

These are some key things to think about when job hunting.

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Calculated automation risk

58% (Moderate Risk)

Moderate Risk (41-60%): Occupations with a moderate risk of automation usually involve routine tasks but still require some human judgment and interaction.

More information on what this score is, and how it is calculated is available here.

Some very important qualities of the job are difficult to automate:

  • Cramped Work Space, Awkward Positions

Some quite important qualities of the job are difficult to automate:

  • Manual Dexterity

  • Finger Dexterity

  • Social Perceptiveness

User poll

30% chance of full automation within the next two decades

Our visitors have voted there's a low chance this occupation will be automated. However, the automation risk level we have generated suggests a higher chance of automation: 58% chance of automation.

What do you think the risk of automation is?

What is the likelihood that Automotive Service Technicians and Mechanics will be replaced by robots or artificial intelligence within the next 20 years?

Sentiment

The following graph is shown where there are enough votes to produce meaningful data. It displays user poll results over time, providing a clear indication of sentiment trends.

Sentiment over time (yearly)

Growth

Slow growth relative to other professions.

The number of 'Automotive Service Technicians and Mechanics' job openings is expected to rise 2.7% by 2033

Total employment, and estimated job openings

* Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics for the period between 2023 and 2033
Updated projections are due 09-2025.

Wages

Low paid relative to other professions

In 2023, the median annual wage for 'Automotive Service Technicians and Mechanics' was $47,770, or $23 per hour

'Automotive Service Technicians and Mechanics' were paid 0.6% lower than the national median wage, which stood at $48,060

Wages over time

* Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics

Volume

Significantly greater range of job opportunities compared to other professions

As of 2023 there were 676,570 people employed as 'Automotive Service Technicians and Mechanics' within the United States.

This represents around 0.45% of the employed workforce across the country

Put another way, around 1 in 224 people are employed as 'Automotive Service Technicians and Mechanics'.

Job description

Diagnose, adjust, repair, or overhaul automotive vehicles.

SOC Code: 49-3023.00

Comments (31)

Leave a comment
Joshua (Low)
10 Nov 2024 13:27
Because vehicles are all different eachother and require a lot of human judgement and quick thought to process and diagnose faults and services
Not today (No chance)
03 Jul 2024 11:55
Stripped bolts, damaged/worn parts, there is no way a computer can find a leak that only shows a small drip from the cooling system or remove a dash to replace a part.
Jim
01 Jul 2025 14:51
Tesla / electric cars (way less moving parts) need less repair (unless in an accident -> then the cars are basically trash -> buy a new one and don't repair). I agree mechanics can't be replaced, but DIY fixes with AI assistance and better engineered cars from AI likely will decrease demand for mechanics. Leading to either a smaller pool of mechanics (who'll make more money) or just reduced incomes across the whole field.
A.S
31 Jul 2025 17:16
Tesla is actually a good example why AI will struggle performing diagnostics. Teslas in house mechanics have plenty of work due to environmental factors. For example a rat pissed on a ground connection thats on a terminating module for a specific private network. The robot can’t communicate with that module same as the person cant. However the human can smell the presence of rats even if its not visible and use that input to realize what to start checking.
LeRoy (No chance)
02 Jul 2024 00:23
The infinite probability of small and insignificant things that can go wrong to set EVEN ONE DTC off cannot be computed by a machine, tested by a machine (if the fault Is in the wiring harness, or other wiring diagram), or fixed by a machine without that EXACT issue being programmed for IF it is even programmed for, and had the ability to fix said issue. Mechanics and technicians like myself are a dying breed.
Scott (No chance)
04 May 2023 02:45
I've been an auto technician for about 37 years now. When I started working on cars computers didn't exist in cars yet. Now some cars have upwards of 15 computers that do everything from working a convertible top to driving a vehicle autonomously. That's a big leap in 37 years but I just don't think that robots could replace the parts we replace or diagnose a problem that humans can. I just don't think its possible. Not now. Not in 50 years. Yes cars will become smarter and have more computers but I still think there will always be a need for a human mechanic to work on them.

Also in my opinion cars haven't gotten any better than they were in the 70s or 80s just different problems and different ways to diagnose and repair them. I've forgotten more than a lot of guys in their 30s and even 40s have learned. I think I was blessed to have become a Mechanic when I did. I've seen and learned a lot more in 37 years than I think most techs will learn in the next 35 or 40 years. I became a mechanic in a time when computers didn't exist in cars I remember how may shops went out of business when Antilock brakes came out.

I'm a multiple times A.S.E. Master Technician. Still learning today still wrenching and I will to the end. I actually enjoyed it more 25 or 30 years ago but I love some of the challenges techs face today. I'm always waiting for that problem no one can figure out and I figure it out.

All the Techs my age know exactly what I'm saying we've all been there and been that guy to fix it. I doubt any robot could do all the things we have to do. It just doesn't seem possible.
A.S (Low)
31 Jul 2025 17:12
Illogical diagnostics from non specific failures thats are undocumented. Micro dexterity in extremely cramped areas ie repairing a single wire on the back side of a harness under a dash.
Klaus (Low)
11 Aug 2025 00:14
many parts are just to difficult to reach, building a robot for all of that would require investments that are probably higher than lifespan ammortization
Scott (Low)
03 Jul 2025 18:48
Manual dexterity
Difficult access to components
Mestica
22 May 2023 22:29
There are simply too many variables, people interactions, and different levels of abuse and care that each vehicle receives.
Alec (Low)
14 Apr 2023 14:48
As cars get more advanced it will be harder to work on them and at the rate technology is progressing it seems unlikely that 20 years from now computers will be doing all the work on cars, humans are a lot more likely to be needed but will have technological aid
Siprico (Highly likely)
28 Mar 2023 17:52
Corporations will always look for the most cost effective way to increase the bottom line, corporations are not concerned with humanity or culture unless it makes them money.
Alex
30 Aug 2021 00:03
Not robots but 'electric cars will reduce maintenance by 90 per cent' - Sandy Munro
Troy (No chance)
14 May 2021 12:09
They won't be able to diagnose little problems.
Maybe 50 years. (No chance)
05 May 2020 11:05
Unless we get self thinking robots that can mimic and access repair books and find problems very unlikely. They would need arms for one.
jim beam (Low)
12 Nov 2019 13:17
Its WAYYYYYYY more complicated then you think
aaa
30 Mar 2019 23:05
Eventually yes, but just don't see it happening in the next 20 years.
jason
01 Oct 2019 15:40
right there with u brother F**k robots
Timmy Martin (No chance)
27 Oct 2023 14:50
The pathway to automating the role of a technician I see would first require modular vehicle construction. Once vehicles have easily replaced and accessible modules i.e. a "front right drive motor assembly". an automated system could isolate the concern to a general module and with the removal of a handful of accessible fasteners could remove the whole module and replace it. With one large fastener at the top of the strut tower two large fasteners on the lower control arm and one large electrical connector, the entire module is swapped and sent for rebuild.
John
14 Feb 2022 04:51
For maintenance, sure, but not every car is exactly the same. This would be one of the last to go. Anyone with a computer job or repetitive task will go first. Look at nursing, they said like 1.5%, and this is 55%... what? You check the temperature of a patient, then play on Facebook and complain about work for 3 hours. Lol. Definitely going to replace most of the basic ones.
Nicholas D'Amico (Low)
06 Jan 2022 19:21
Assembly and manufacturing will be automated. Minor service jobs, like fluid changes, will undoubtedly be automated away.

However, troubleshooting and repairing vehicles with problems that aren't related to recurring service will not be automated away.

With this in mind, I think that the market for mechanics will actually increase due to the automation of vehicles on the road. More vehicles mean more mechanics - more jiffy lube robot techs and more certified mechanics in the future.
Dean (No chance)
27 May 2021 03:19
There simply is to many variables/people interactions that have to happen/every vehicle is different in the amount of abuse and care towards that vehicle
Jarno
09 Jan 2021 11:08
Totally agree with the comments here. You’d need a super AI just to recognize the wear and/or damage. Then it also needs to think of a way to actually do it... and then you’d need a super-robot to be actually able to do the very diverse physical stuff. (Arms? Tools?) It wouldn’t be cost effective to design and build such a robot anytime soon. This job is super under-appreciated in my opinion.
Siprico
28 Mar 2023 18:02
What is "super" AI? Seeing as every point I've read so far only takes into account the current(2023) state of the industry with out implementing the advances in the industry that would naturally happen with the passing of time. Once You apply this logical progression of the industry you must also take into account that advancements in the computer/robotics world are much more impactful and happen at an increasingly increased rate. "Robots will never be able to build a car." This used to be the motto; but as we all know that industry was quickly taken over by automation, and tech has only gotten exponentially more advanced since that time.

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