Electrical and Electronics Drafters

Moderate Risk
Low High

Explore safer careers (5)

Lower estimated automation risk

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Why it fits

Circuit diagrams, wiring layouts, specifications, and design standards are strong foundations with credentials.

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Why it fits

Electronics layouts, circuit documentation, components, and design review knowledge transfer with education.

Industrial Engineering Technologists and Technicians
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Process layouts, manufacturing drawings, standards, and production documentation provide a bridge.

Electrical and Electronics Repairers, Commercial and Industrial Equipment
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Why it fits

Schematics, wiring diagrams, components, and troubleshooting documentation overlap with repair work.

Architectural and Civil Drafters
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Occupation snapshot

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
3.1/10
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.

Risk & user votes

Calculated automation risk

44% (Moderate Risk)

Moderate Risk (41-60%): This occupation may be meaningfully affected by automation. Some parts of the role may be suitable for AI, software, or robotics, while others still rely on human skill, judgement, trust, or real-world context. People in this range may benefit from building skills that complement automation and reduce replacement risk.

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

Human strengths important in this job

These are human abilities and work contexts that are important in this occupation. They may help explain why parts of the role are harder to replace end-to-end, but they are not the only inputs into the automation score.

Thinking creatively

Quite important
Why this matters
Coming up with original ideas and designs—creating new concepts, products, systems, or artistic work. This kind of open-ended invention and taste-based judgment is harder to automate end-to-end than routine, rule-based tasks.
Jobs that also use this strength

Decision-making and problem solving

Quite important
Why this matters
Analyze information, weigh tradeoffs, and choose the best solution—especially when situations are ambiguous, high-stakes, or have real-world consequences.
Jobs that also use this strength

Active learning

Quite important
Why this matters
Keeps learning from new information and applying it to make better decisions now and in the future, especially when situations change.
Jobs that also use this strength

Education and training expertise

Quite important
Why this matters
Designing and delivering instruction—adapting lessons to different learners and measuring whether training actually works.
Jobs that also use this strength

What users think

Based on 27 votes

64% chance of full automation within the next two decades

Our visitors have voted that it's probable this occupation will be automated. This assessment is further supported by the calculated automation risk level, which estimates 44% chance of automation.

What do you think the risk of automation is?

What is the likelihood that Electrical and Electronics Drafters will be replaced by robots or artificial intelligence within the next 20 years?

View sentiment trend

Pay & outlook

Wages

High paid relative to other professions

In 2024, the median annual wage for Electrical and Electronics Drafters was $73,720 ($35 per hour).

The median annual wage for Electrical and Electronics Drafters was 48.9% higher than the national median annual wage, which stood at $49,500.

View wage trend

Wages over time

* Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics

Growth

Very slow growth relative to other professions.

The number of 'Electrical and Electronics Drafters' job openings is expected to decline 5.6% by 2034

View employment trend

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.

Volume

Lower range of job opportunities compared to other professions

As of 2024 there were 20,020 people employed as 'Electrical and Electronics Drafters' within the United States.

This represents around < 0.001% of the employed workforce across the country

Put another way, around 1 in 7 thousand people are employed as 'Electrical and Electronics Drafters'.

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What people are saying (2)

Shyam (Moderate)
18 May 2025 18:44
There are already tools which can automate electrical drafting to an extent, though it is not a robot.
yakup (Highly likely)
17 May 2023 16:14
The tasks performed and the components used are standard in an integrated circuit or system, and it is clear where everything needs to be connected. Considering the rate of development of artificial intelligence today, understanding these and doing even more will not be too challenging.

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Job description

Prepare wiring diagrams, circuit board assembly diagrams, and layout drawings used for the manufacture, installation, or repair of electrical equipment.

O*NET-SOC code: 17-3012.00