The average salary for a hearing aid specialist in Florida is around $51,590 per year.
Avg Salary
Hearing aid specialists earn an average yearly salary of $51,590.
Wages typically start from $30,300 and go up to $116,360.
0% below national average Updated in 2018
Hearing aid specialist earnings by seniority
Top-level hearing aid specialist earnings begin at:
$55.94 per hour
$116,360 per year
Senior-level hearing aid specialist earnings begin at:
$41.45 per hour
$86,220 per year
Mid-level hearing aid specialist earnings begin at:
$24.80 per hour
$51,590 per year
Junior-level hearing aid specialist earnings begin at:
$20.33 per hour
$42,290 per year
Starting level hearing aid specialist earnings begin at:
$14.57 per hour
$30,300 per year
Approximate values based on highest and lowest earning segments.
Hearing aid specialist salary by state
| State Name | Average Salary |
|---|---|
| Maine | $97,060 |
| Hawaii | $81,350 |
| Kansas | $67,000 |
| Alaska | $64,800 |
| Kentucky | $64,460 |
| North Carolina | $62,240 |
| Montana | $61,160 |
| Indiana | $59,890 |
| Minnesota | $58,390 |
| Michigan | $56,650 |
| California | $56,070 |
| Alabama | $55,380 |
| Arizona | $55,290 |
| Pennsylvania | $54,810 |
| Ohio | $54,490 |
| Colorado | $53,940 |
| Oregon | $53,390 |
| New Jersey | $53,380 |
| Utah | $53,350 |
| Texas | $53,260 |
| Louisiana | $52,050 |
| Massachusetts | $51,790 |
| Washington | $51,670 |
| Florida | $51,590 |
| Missouri | $51,360 |
| New York | $50,190 |
| Nevada | $48,800 |
| Connecticut | $47,570 |
| Idaho | $47,320 |
| Wisconsin | $46,950 |
| West Virginia | $46,210 |
| Oklahoma | $43,310 |
| New Mexico | $43,090 |
| Iowa | $42,480 |
| South Carolina | $41,600 |
| Illinois | $40,710 |
| Tennessee | $39,280 |
| Virginia | $38,780 |
| Maryland | $37,910 |
| Georgia | $37,340 |
| Arkansas | $36,610 |
| Puerto Rico | $35,410 |
| Nebraska | $27,770 |
How do hearing aid specialist salaries compare to similar careers?
Hearing aid specialists earn about the same as related careers in Florida. On average, they make less than acute care nurse practitioners but more than radiologic technologists.
Source: CareerExplorer (Aggregated)




