Oregon’s 2024 Maritime Employment

by Shaun Barrick

April 10, 2026

Oregon’s maritime sector workforce totaled nearly 14,000 in 2024. This includes Oregon residents and nonresidents who worked in Oregon as either covered payroll employees or as noncovered employees in maritime industries. Of those jobs, 11,986 were covered by Oregon’s Unemployment Insurance program and 1,877 were nonemployers. Nonemployers are businesses that are subject to federal income tax and have no paid employees. Nine out of 10 nonemployers were found in commercial fishing (92%; 1,733 jobs). 

Among covered payroll jobs in the maritime sector, 6,637 jobs were in a group of 17 industries defined as the maritime sector with guidance from a 2017 maritime task force. All jobs in these 17 industries are considered maritime employment. Another 5,349 jobs were identified in industries outside of the 17 defined maritime industries but still serve an integral part in Oregon’s maritime sector and are counted as additional maritime sector jobs. Data on noncovered employment came from the year 2023, which is the most current year of data available. 

Twenty-two of Oregon’s public ports support the maritime sector in multiple ways with employment counted in multiple industries, so port employment is not separated out from total covered employment. However, Oregon’s maritime ports workforce accounted for 740 jobs in 2024.

Oregon's Covered Maritime Sector Jobs and Wages by Industry, 2024
Skip table
Industry Jobs Total Wages Average Annual Wage
All Covered Maritime Jobs 11,986 $990,581,455 $82,645
Support Activities for Water Transportation 1,510 $156,665,780 $103,752
Ship Building and Repairing 1,066 $98,471,093 $92,374
Seafood Product Preparation and Packaging 950 $41,985,674 $44,195
Fish and Seafood Merchant Wholesalers 582 $46,297,329 $79,549
Boat Building 510 $30,476,270 $59,757
Boat Dealers 441 $28,534,283 $64,704
Fish and Seafood Retailers 285 $11,082,248 $38,885
Scenic and Sightseeing Transportation, Water 275 $10,566,731 $38,424
Marinas 219 $10,269,814 $46,894
Finfish Farming and Fish Hatcheries 197 $13,017,039 $66,076
Finfish Fishing 183 $11,075,206 $60,520
Coastal and Deep Sea Freight Transportation 173 $29,283,748 $169,270
Inland Water Freight Transportation 96 $11,600,739 $120,841
Shellfish Farming 77 $2,609,156 $33,885
Inland Water Passenger Transportation 34 $1,430,867 $42,084
Shellfish Fishing 24 $1,566,648 $65,277
Other Aquaculture 14 $569,405 $40,672
All other identified maritime sector firms 5,349 $485,079,425 $90,686
 

Wages in Oregon’s Covered Maritime Industries

Oregon’s covered maritime industries paid a total of roughly $990 million in wages in 2024. The average annual wage of covered jobs in Oregon’s maritime industry was $82,646. That was 16% higher than Oregon’s average annual wage in all industries, $71,313. Average annual wages vary depending on industry, ranging from a low of $33,996 in shellfish farming to a high of $169,107 in coastal and deep sea freight transportation. 

The average annual wage is based on the 11,986 jobs covered by the unemployment insurance program. Wage information is not available for commercial fishing, except for the small percentage of commercial fishing jobs covered by unemployment insurance.

Importance of Maritime Sector Jobs in Rural Communities

While maritime sector jobs are prevalent on the Oregon Coast, maritime sector jobs can be found in each of Oregon’s 36 counties except Malheur. Data for Crook, Gilliam, Sherman, Wheeler, and Yamhill counties is suppressed for confidentiality.

Across Oregon, the maritime sector made up less than 1% of total employment in the state. In some communities, maritime sector jobs represented a larger portion of the total workforce. The counties with the largest portion of workforce in the maritime sector were Lincoln (5.5%), Clatsop (5.2%), Coos (3.3%), and Curry (3.1%). In total, maritime sector jobs in coastal counties totaled 4,515 jobs. Multnomah County had the most maritime jobs of any county (5,385 maritime sector jobs), but these jobs were just 0.9% of the total workforce.

The number of maritime sector jobs by county is available from the covered employment data. Commercial fishers by county of residence is available from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Nonemployer Statistics and is based on Internal Revenue Service income tax filings. Covered employment and nonemployers are combined for the map of maritime workforce by region.

 

The Aging of Oregon’s Maritime Sector Workers

The maritime sector workforce tended to be older than Oregon’s overall workforce in 2024. About 30% of jobs in Oregon’s covered fishing, maritime manufacturing, and transportation jobs were held by workers age 55 and over. That’s a significantly higher share than the 24% of the overall workforce. At least some of these workers will be looking to retire within the next 10 years.

Maritime industries with the most workers nearing retirement were support activities for water transportation (467 jobs), ship and boat building (430 jobs), and seafood product preparation and packaging (300 jobs). The industry with the largest share of workers age 55 years and over was fishing (39%), where 78 covered jobs are held by workers age 55 years and over. 

Information about the age of the workforce is from the U.S. Census Bureau’s Quarterly Workforce Indicators. It is based on covered employment that is combined with the age of individual workers from federal sources. There is less industry detail available from this source, so the age information is limited to eight maritime sectors and covers 42% of covered jobs.

Oregon Nonemployers in Maritime Industries, 2023
Skip table
Industry Nonemployers
Total 1,877
Fishing 1,733
Water Transportation 78
Boat Dealers 33
Fish and Seafood Markets 22
Seafood Product Preparation and Packaging 11
 

Employment Projections Change through the Year 2034

The core maritime sector workforce is expected to remain steady between 2024 and 2034, according to projections from the Oregon Employment Department. That is a net increase of around 20 jobs. Ship and boat building is expected to add 81 jobs, the largest gain in the maritime sector. Seafood product preparation and packaging has the second largest gain, with 62 new jobs by 2034. On a percentage basis, marinas are expected to add the most jobs, growing 11% by 2034 (24 jobs).

Industries projected to have fewer jobs in 2034 are support activities for water transportation (-157); fishing (-87 jobs); and inland water transportation (-10). Although these industries are projected to have fewer jobs in the future than today, they will continue to need more workers due to replacement job openings as current workers change occupations or leave the labor force. The need for replacement openings is reflected in the occupational employment data below. 

Occupations in Oregon’s Maritime Industries

The workforce of Oregon’s maritime industries consists of many different occupations across the 17 industries that make up the core maritime sector. Information about maritime occupations helps to better describe Oregon’s maritime workers and the occupational needs that the sector will have moving into the future. Maritime occupations are expected to add 21 jobs due to economic expansion and have 8,579 replacement openings through 2034, totaling 8,599 total job openings during the 10-year period.

Replacement openings, the number of job openings created when workers change occupations or leave the labor force, are expected to total nearly 8,600 through the year 2034. This represents the need for workers with the training required to fill those openings. Replacements are a much larger source of workforce need than jobs created due to sector growth. Through 2034, Oregon’s maritime sector will need 408 replacement workers for each new worker needed due to economic expansion. That’s a greater need for replacements than across the economy overall. Oregon projections show 17 replacement openings for every opening created due to economic growth. With an older workforce, the maritime sector is going to have openings to fill as current workers retire. The 14 occupations with the most jobs in Oregon’s maritime sector are shown in the table.

Top Occupations in Oregon's Maritime Industries, Replacements Based on Jobs in All Oregon Industries (Not Just Maritime)
Skip table
Occupation Title 2024 Employment 2034 Projected Employment Change Replacement Openings (2024-2034) Total Openings (2024-2034)
Total, All Occupations 7,592 7,612 21 8,579 8,599
Laborers and Freight, Stock, and Material Movers, Hand 1,282 1,255 -27 1,601 1,574
Fishing and Hunting Workers 1,191 1,106 -85 1,557 1,472
Meat, Poultry, and Fish Cutters and Trimmers 637 671 34 761 795
Welders, Cutters, Solderers, and Brazers 485 491 6 471 476
Captains, Mates, and Pilots of Water Vessels 353 354 2 373 375
Sailors and Marine Oilers 286 284 -2 333 330
First-Line Supervisors of Production and Operating Workers 206 221 15 203 218
Coating, Painting, and Spraying Machine Setters, Operators, and Tenders 184 194 9 179 188
Shipping, Receiving, and Inventory Clerks 167 146 -21 143 123
General and Operations Managers 144 149 5 113 118
First Line Supervisors of Transportation & Material Moving Workers, Exc Aircraft Cargo Handling Supervisor 132 135 2 127 130
Miscellaneous Assemblers and Fabricators 125 135 10 139 148
Fiberglass Laminators and Fabricators 119 128 8 132 140
Ship Engineers 102 102 0 119 119
 

Conclusion

Oregon’s maritime sector is widespread and plays a key economic role in many coastal and rural communities. With a workforce totaling nearly 14,000 in 2024 and average wages 16% higher than the state average, the maritime sector supports many family-wage jobs in Oregon. The sector is expected to continue adding new jobs, albeit at a slower pace than the statewide average, creating the need for more workers. 

Oregon’s maritime workforce is also aging. A large share of the current workforce will retire or change careers within the next 10 years, creating replacement openings for new workers. These workforce trends represent challenges for employers trying to fill their job vacancies, as well as more job opportunities for Oregonians in the maritime sector.


Latest Items

Subscription Service

You can sign up to receive email notifications when publications have been updated or new articles are added for any geographic area you are interested in. You can receive new articles on a daily, weekly, or monthly schedule – whichever is most convenient for you.

Visit the subscription order form to sign up. It allows you to choose your preferences, and you can change those preferences – or unsubscribe – at any time.