Students in Mississippi received better scores on tests than students in California. Mississippi pays the least for teachers, California the most—almost double. Money is not why California students get diploma’s they can not read, history they do not understand and are willing to support Hamas terrorists and hate Jews.
- “California teachers earned the highest average salary in the U.S. during the 2023-24 school year, reaching $101,084.
- The national average teacher salary increased by 3.8% to $72,030, but still lags behind inflation.”
Maybe if they taught math and science, instead of DEI, sexual grooming and misrepresent history, our children would get a real education—Sacramento Democrats are afraid if students learned the truth, they would have no voters.
How much do California teachers make? Report ranks California teacher pay top in nation
James Ward Amanda Wallace, Palm Springs Desert Sun, 5/7/25 https://www.desertsun.com/story/news/nation/california/2025/05/01/california-teacher-salaries-rank-top-in-us-report-says/83387612007/
- California teachers earned the highest average salary in the U.S. during the 2023-24 school year, reaching $101,084.
- The national average teacher salary increased by 3.8% to $72,030, but still lags behind inflation.
- Starting teacher salaries saw a 4.4% increase nationally, the largest in 15 years, reaching $46,526.
- Despite these increases, teacher salaries remain a concern amid ongoing shortages and recruitment challenges.
California teachers had the highest average salary in the country during the 2023-24 school year, according to recently published reports by the National Education Association.
The average teacher in the Golden State made $101,084 last year, as reported by the 2023-24 NEA Rankings and Estimates report. This is a 6% increase from the previous year’s average salary. Additionally, this figure is about $30,000 higher than the nationwide average of $72,030.
California’s average teacher starting salary for the 2023-24 school year was $58,409, the second highest in the nation, according to the NEA Teacher Salary Benchmark Report. This figure is more than $12,000 higher than the national average starting teacher salary of $46,526.
According to the benchmark report, starting teacher salaries across the United States “picked up a little momentum” last year, increasing by an average 4.4%. This jump marks the most significant increase over the 15 years that NEA has been tracking this data.
Salary increases vs inflation amid an ongoing teacher shortage
While educators have begun to see “long-overdue pay increases,” partly thanks to union advocacy both at the bargaining table and with state legislature, the average teacher pay has failed to keep up with inflation, NEA said. When adjusted for inflation, according to the report, teachers make on average 5% less than they did 10 years ago and 9% less than the peak in 2009-10.
Last year, the national average teacher salary saw an increase of 3.8%, just below the 4% increase reported the year before and still less than 2009-10. While the data shows that salaries have improved, NEA says that they are “still likely too low to make any lasting positive impact on teacher recruitment and retention.”
These reports come amid an ongoing teacher shortage, both in New Jersey and across the country. This crisis, fueled by retention challenges and a drop in the number of students seeking teaching degrees was exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic.
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The average starting teacher salary in the United States in 2023-24 was $46,526, a 4.4% increase from the year before and the largest increase in 15 years, NEA reported. While this improvement was diminished by a 3% inflation rate, NEA says that the progress detailed in the report is still encouraging.
For example, the NEA’s data shows that the average starting salary for teachers now exceeds $50,000 in 15 states. This represents a jump from 23% to 30% of school districts that meet this benchmark. Additionally, according to the NEA, more than 800 school districts around the country paid teachers a starting salary of at least $60,000 during the 2023-24 school year marking a 66% increase from the year prior.
“These sorts of improvements are critical in the effort to attract and keep teachers,” reads the report. “Even after entering the profession, too many educators find they cannot make ends meet, forced to take on second or even third jobs, leading to burnout and an early exit after only a few years.”
States with the highest average teacher salary in 2023-24
The 10 states (and Washington, D.C.) with the highest average teacher salary during the 2023-24 school year, according to the NEA, were:
- California: $101,084
- New York: $95,615
- Massachusetts: $92,076
- Washington: $91,720
- District of Columbia: $86,663
- Connecticut: $86,511
- Maryland: $84,338
- New Jersey: $82,877
- Rhode Island: $82,189
- Alaska: $78,256
States with the lowest average teacher salary
The 10 states with the lowest average teacher salary during the 2023-24 school year, according to the NEA, were:
- Mississippi: $53,704
- Florida: $54,875
- Missouri: $55,132
- West Virginia: $55,516
- Louisiana: $55,911
- South Dakota: $56,328
- Montana: $57,556
- Kansas: $58,146
- North Carolina: $58,292
- Kentucky: $58,325
To view the NEA’s full report and state-by-state rankings, visit https://www.nea.org/node/27906/all-news-articles/state-teacher-pay.