Risk is not paid for
Fatality rate vs median pay, 2024Every dot is one of the 47 occupations for which BLS publishes both a fatality rate and a median wage. Read it as a cloud, not as points: it climbs almost straight up, and it barely moves sideways. Risk spans a factor of 276. Pay does not follow it.
The wage join crosses two universes, and you should not trust it further than that. The fatality rate counts the self-employed, who die at 10.8 per 100,000 against 2.9 for wage and salary workers. The wage survey does not count them at all. That is why fishing and hunting workers - ranked #2 in the country for fatal risk, at 88.8 deaths per 100,000 - has no dot: OEWS publishes no wage for it, because the people who do it mostly work for themselves. The dots you can see are therefore a floor on the mismatch, not a measure of it.
The numbered dots, in order. The number on each plum dot is its rank here.
| # | Occupation | SOC | Rate | Margin of error | Deaths | Median pay |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Logging workers | 45-4020 | 110.4 | +/- 34.88 | 51 | $49,540 |
| 2 | Fishing and hunting workers | 45-3031 | 88.8 | +/- 42.31 | 24 | not published |
| 3 | Roofers | 47-2181 | 48.7 | +/- 7.38 | 104 | $50,970 |
| 4 | Structural iron and steel workers | 47-2221 | 37.8 | +/- 13.35 | 14 | $62,700 |
| 5 | Refuse and recyclable material collectors | 53-7081 | 37.4 | +/- 8.15 | 36 | $48,350 |
| 6 | Aircraft pilots and flight engineers | 53-2010 | 36.7 | +/- 6.28 | 73 | $198,100 |
| 7 | Helpers, construction trades | 47-3010 | 35.8 | +/- 9.63 | 18 | $40,430 |
| 8 | Underground mining machine operators | 47-5040 | 35.6 | +/- 11.61 | 12 | $66,770 |
| 9 | Driver/sales workers and truck drivers | 53-3030 | 25.7 | +/- 1.14 | 950 | $49,550 |
| 10 | Grounds maintenance workers | 37-3010 | 20.9 | +/- 1.33 | 239 | $38,470 |
| All U.S. workers | 00-0000 | 3.3 | +/- 0.01 | 5,070 | $49,500 |
The deadliest ten
Deaths per 100,000 FTE workers, 2024The national rate is 3.3. Logging runs 33.5x that. But the whiskers here are the published margins of error, and they are wide, because these are small occupations in which a handful of deaths moves the rate a long way. Read the intervals, not the ranking. Logging and fishing overlap; so do the four jobs bunched in the thirties. This is an order of magnitude, not a leaderboard.
Every occupation with a published rate (47)
How they die
Event or exposure, 2024 vs 2023A third of all workplace deaths are traffic. Not industrial machinery, not falls from height - vehicles. Transportation has been the leading cause every year the census has run, and at 1,937 deaths it is larger than the next two causes combined.
The exposure category fell 16.2%
Deaths from exposure to harmful substances or environments dropped from 820 to 687. Almost all of that is one line item: unintentional drug and alcohol overdoses at work, down from 512 to 410, a fall of 19.9%. It is the largest single-category improvement in the 2024 census, and it tracks the national decline in overdose deaths rather than anything that happened on a worksite.
What "died at work" includes
CFOI counts a death as work-related on the circumstances of the event, not on who or what caused it. So these 5,070 include 263 suicides and 410 overdoses that happened at work, and 470 homicides. Reasonable people read that inclusion differently. We do not remove them, we do not hide them, and we do not put them in a footnote: they are roughly 13% of the headline number, and you should know that before you use it.
Event categories, in figures
| Event or exposure | 2024 | 2023 | Change | Share of classified |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Transportation incidents | 1,937 | 1,942 | -5 | 38.3% |
| Falls, slips, trips | 844 | 885 | -41 | 16.7% |
| Contact with objects and equipment | 756 | 779 | -23 | 14.9% |
| Violence and other injuries by persons or animals | 733 | 740 | -7 | 14.5% |
| Exposure to harmful substances or environments | 687 | 820 | -133 | 13.6% |
| Fires and explosions | 93 | 104 | -11 | 1.8% |
| Overexertion and bodily reaction | 12 | 6 | +6 | 0.2% |
| Classified total | 5,062 | - | - | 100% |
| All fatal work injuries | 5,070 | 5,283 | -213 | - |
Where they died
Fatal work injuries by state, 2024Counts, not rates - so this map is mostly a map of where the workers are. Texas buried 557 workers in 2024, California 419. Together the five largest account for 33% of the national toll.
- 0
- 1 - 24
- 25 - 74
- 75 - 149
- 150 - 299
- 300 or more
Read this as population, not danger. Texas is at the top because Texas is large. BLS does not publish a fatality rate per state in this table, so neither do we - dividing the count by a workforce figure from a different survey would produce a number that looks authoritative and is not. New York is assembled from the two rows BLS publishes for it (the state outside New York City, plus the city); Puerto Rico and Guam are excluded, because they are not in the U.S. total. The 51 jurisdictions here sum to exactly 5,070.
Every state, in figures
| # | State | 2024 | 2023 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Texas | 557 | 564 | -7 |
| 2 | California | 419 | 439 | -20 |
| 3 | Florida | 284 | 306 | -22 |
| 4 | New York | 217 | 246 | -29 |
| 5 | North Carolina | 196 | 177 | +19 |
| 6 | Pennsylvania | 185 | 169 | +16 |
| 7 | Georgia | 170 | 192 | -22 |
| 8 | Ohio | 165 | 164 | +1 |
| 9 | Illinois | 156 | 145 | +11 |
| 10 | Tennessee | 155 | 164 | -9 |
| 11 | Michigan | 152 | 166 | -14 |
| 12 | Virginia | 137 | 117 | +20 |
| 13 | Indiana | 135 | 157 | -22 |
| 14 | Missouri | 118 | 114 | +4 |
| 15 | Wisconsin | 109 | 112 | -3 |
| 16 | South Carolina | 103 | 112 | -9 |
| 17 | Washington | 102 | 97 | +5 |
| 18 | Louisiana | 96 | 104 | -8 |
| 19 | Arizona | 94 | 103 | -9 |
| 20 | Mississippi | 94 | 72 | +22 |
| 21 | Maryland | 93 | 69 | +24 |
| 22 | Colorado | 92 | 83 | +9 |
| 23 | Minnesota | 84 | 70 | +14 |
| 24 | New Jersey | 84 | 81 | +3 |
| 25 | Iowa | 83 | 91 | -8 |
| 26 | Arkansas | 79 | 92 | -13 |
| 27 | Alabama | 75 | 75 | 0 |
| 28 | Massachusetts | 75 | 111 | -36 |
| 29 | Oklahoma | 73 | 76 | -3 |
| 30 | Kentucky | 70 | 91 | -21 |
| 31 | Utah | 63 | 69 | -6 |
| 32 | Kansas | 56 | 53 | +3 |
| 33 | Oregon | 52 | 54 | -2 |
| 34 | Idaho | 45 | 48 | -3 |
| 35 | Connecticut | 41 | 33 | +8 |
| 36 | West Virginia | 40 | 58 | -18 |
| 37 | Wyoming | 37 | 45 | -8 |
| 38 | Nevada | 33 | 57 | -24 |
| 39 | New Mexico | 32 | 38 | -6 |
| 40 | Montana | 31 | 38 | -7 |
| 41 | South Dakota | 29 | 20 | +9 |
| 42 | North Dakota | 28 | 26 | +2 |
| 43 | Nebraska | 25 | 46 | -21 |
| 44 | Alaska | 24 | 29 | -5 |
| 45 | Maine | 19 | 27 | -8 |
| 46 | Hawaii | 16 | 16 | 0 |
| 47 | New Hampshire | 12 | 21 | -9 |
| 48 | District of Columbia | 11 | 12 | -1 |
| 49 | Delaware | 10 | 11 | -1 |
| 50 | Vermont | 8 | 16 | -8 |
| 51 | Rhode Island | 6 | 6 | 0 |
| All U.S. | 5,070 | 5,283 | -213 |
Fourteen years
Fatal work injuries, national total, 2011-2024The toll peaked at 5,486 in 2022 and has fallen for two years running, to 5,070. It is still higher than any year before 2016. The dip in 2020 is not a safety achievement; it is a year in which far fewer Americans went to work.
Do not read a rate off this line. The workforce grew over these fourteen years, so a flat count is a falling rate. The 2024 rate is 3.3 per 100,000 full-time-equivalent workers, published by BLS. And do not compute it yourself from the count: 5,070 deaths against 297,600 million hours worked gives 3.41, not 3.3, because the rate's numerator excludes volunteers, active-duty military and workers under 16 while the headline count does not.
Every year, in figures
| Year | Fatal work injuries | Change | Survey |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2011 | 4,693 | - | FW |
| 2012 | 4,628 | -65 | FW |
| 2013 | 4,585 | -43 | FW |
| 2014 | 4,821 | +236 | FW |
| 2015 | 4,836 | +15 | FW |
| 2016 | 5,190 | +354 | FW |
| 2017 | 5,147 | -43 | FW |
| 2018 | 5,250 | +103 | FW |
| 2019 | 5,333 | +83 | FW |
| 2020 | 4,764 | -569 | FW |
| 2021 | 5,190 | +426 | FW |
| 2022 | 5,486 | +296 | FW |
| 2023 | 5,283 | -203 | FA |
| 2024 | 5,070 | -213 | FA |
Look up a job
47 occupationsOne page per occupation: its fatality rate and margin of error, its median pay, its position against the national medians, and where it sits among the 47 occupations BLS publishes a rate for.
- Logging workers 110.4
- Fishing and hunting workers 88.8
- Roofers 48.7
- Structural iron and steel workers 37.8
- Refuse and recyclable material collectors 37.4
- Aircraft pilots and flight engineers 36.7
- Helpers, construction trades 35.8
- Underground mining machine operators 35.6
- Driver/sales workers and truck drivers 25.7
- Grounds maintenance workers 20.9
- Farmers, ranchers, and other agricultural managers 19.4
- Miscellaneous agricultural workers 19.0
- Construction laborers 15.8
- Electrical power-line installers and repairers 13.8
- First-line supervisors of mechanics, installers, and repairers 13.1
- First-line supervisors of construction trades and extraction workers 12.8
- First-line supervisors of landscaping, lawn service, and groundskeeping workers 12.3
- Construction equipment operators 11.7
- Telecommunications line installers and repairers 11.5
- Maintenance and repair workers, general 10.8
- Shuttle drivers, chauffeurs, and taxi drivers 8.7
- Bus and truck mechanics and diesel engine specialists 8.6
- Security guards and gaming surveillance officers 7.7
- Carpenters 7.5
- Industrial machinery installation, repair, and maintenance workers 7.0
- Pipelayers, plumbers, pipefitters, and steamfitters 6.9
- Welding, soldering, and brazing workers 6.9
- Heating, air conditioning, and refrigeration mechanics and installers 6.7
- Painters and paperhangers 6.6
- Automotive service technicians and mechanics 6.3
- Laborers and freight, stock, and material movers, hand 5.4
- Electricians 5.3
- Industrial truck and tractor operators 5.0
- Firefighters 4.0
- Athletes, coaches, umpires, and related workers 3.5
- Emergency medical technicians and paramedics 3.3
- Cashiers (including gambling change persons and booth cashiers) 3.1
- Janitors and building cleaners 3.0
- Supervisors of food preparation and serving workers 2.9
- Retail salespersons 2.4
- Property, real estate, and community association managers 2.0
- First-line supervisors of production and operating workers 1.9
- Food service managers 1.4
- First-line supervisors of retail sales workers 1.4
- Construction managers 1.2
- First-line supervisors of non-retail sales workers 0.6
- Registered nurses 0.4
Plum marks the 10 deadliest. The number is deaths per 100,000 full-time-equivalent workers.
Methodology
Notes on the DataEvery figure on this page is read from real BLS bulk files. Nothing here is estimated, modelled or curated. The counts come from the Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries - a census, not a sample: BLS substantiates each death against two or more independent source documents (death certificates, workers' compensation filings, OSHA and other agency reports) before it becomes a row. The rates and their margins of error come from the CFOI hours-based rates table. The wages come from the Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics survey for May 2024. The two are joined on the SOC occupation code. Vintage: 2024 reference year (CFOI released 2025-12; includes the BLS data correction of 2026-03-24). Wages: OEWS May 2024.
The rate is published, never derived
It is tempting to compute the fatality rate yourself: 5,070 deaths against 297,600 million hours worked, scaled to a 200-million-hour FTE year, gives 3.41 per 100,000. That number is wrong. BLS publishes 3.3, because the rate's numerator excludes volunteers, active-duty military personnel and workers under 16, while the headline count includes them. We ship the published rate everywhere and show the naive one only to name the mistake.
The wage join crosses two universes
This is the biggest caveat on the page, and it is the reason the central finding should be read as an order of magnitude rather than a decimal. CFOI's fatality rates cover everyone who works, including the self-employed, who are killed at 10.8 per 100,000 against 2.9 for wage and salary workers. OEWS covers employees only. The self-employed are in the numerator of the risk and absent from the pay.
The gap is not theoretical. OEWS publishes no wage at all for fishing and hunting workers - ranked #2 in the country for fatal risk - because it is not, for the most part, an employee job. We keep that row on the page with an empty wage rather than dropping it, because a silently missing row is the kind of thing that turns a caveat into a lie. The headline comparison therefore rests on the 9 of the 10 deadliest occupations that OEWS does cover: their median pay is $49,550 against $49,500 for all U.S. occupations.
The margins of error are large, and the ranking is soft
BLS publishes a margin of error on every rate, and for small occupations they are wide: logging is 110.4 +/- 34.88, fishing and hunting 88.8 +/- 42.31. Those intervals overlap. "The deadliest job in America" is a headline the data does not quite support, so we draw the whiskers and say so.
Occupations, not the groups that contain them
The rates table interleaves SOC major groups ("Construction and extraction occupations") with the detailed occupations inside them. Ranking them together would count the same workers twice, so we keep only the 47 detailed occupations that carry a published rate. If you see a count of 66 elsewhere, that figure includes the parent groups.
Three surveys, one census
CFOI is split across three BLS surveys by taxonomy era - FI (2003-2010), FW (2011-2022) and FA (2023 onward). They are separate because the SOC, NAICS and OIICS revisions broke comparability between them. The fourteen-year trend line uses the national total only, which does survive the break, and the break is drawn on the chart. Every detailed cut on this page - occupation, event, state - is FA-only. Do not concatenate the detailed categories across the eras.
The state rows double-count if you sum them
CFOI publishes New York three ways: the state excluding New York City, New York City, and the two combined. It also publishes Puerto Rico and Guam, which are not in the national total. Add up every area row and you get 5,309 against a true 5,070. We build New York from its two parts, drop the territories, and the build fails loudly if the 51 jurisdictions do not sum to the national total exactly.
What "died at work" includes
CFOI classifies a death as work-related on the circumstances of the event, not on its cause. So the 5,070 includes 263 suicides and 410 unintentional overdoses that occurred at work - together about 13% of the total. Whether a suicide in a workplace is a workplace death is a real question and we do not answer it for you. We do not remove those cases, and we do not bury the fact that they are in there.
What you are not seeing
Only fatalities. Non-fatal injuries and illnesses come from a different program (the SOII sample survey, with its own under-reporting and suppressed cells) and are out of scope here entirely. There is no state-level fatality rate on this page, because BLS does not publish one in this table and we will not manufacture one from a workforce denominator taken from another survey. 8 of the 5,070 deaths carry no event classification, so the event shares are shares of the 5,062 that do.
Generated 2026-07-13 02:59 UTC
Source: BLS Census of Fatal Occupational Injuries (CFOI), joined to BLS OEWS May 2024 national wages