Sterile processing technicians are among the most consistently employed healthcare support workers in the country, and compensation has climbed steadily as hospitals and surgical centers compete for certified talent. The national average for a sterile processing technician sits at $57,186 per year ($27.49/hr) based on ZipRecruiter data as of February 2026, with Glassdoor reporting $49,228 for self-reported salaries and the 90th percentile reaching $67,880. Salary.com places the Sterile Processing Technician I title at $41,450 nationally, but that figure reflects entry-level, uncertified roles and pulls the average down significantly. Certified, experienced SPTs in hospital settings routinely land well above the national midpoint.
Travel sterile processing technicians command a substantial premium, with weekly packages averaging around $1,400 and crisis contract rates reaching $1,800–$2,000+ in acute shortage markets, placing experienced travel SPTs well above $70,000 in annual earnings.
Several variables determine where any individual technician lands: certification level, facility type, city and state, shift differential, and union affiliation. This page breaks down each of those factors with 2026 data.
Certification and experience are the two biggest pay drivers in sterile processing. Uncertified techs earn significantly less than CRCST holders at the same facility, and the gap widens with each additional credential.
| Experience Level | Years of Experience | Avg Annual Salary | Avg Hourly Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trainee / Uncertified Tech | 0–1 years | $32,000 – $40,000 | $15 – $19 |
| Entry-Level Tech (CRCST eligible) | 1–2 years | $38,000 – $48,000 | $18 – $23 |
| Certified SPT (CRCST) | 2–5 years | $46,000 – $58,000 | $22 – $28 |
| Senior SPT / Lead Tech | 5–10 years | $55,000 – $70,000 | $26 – $34 |
| SPD Supervisor | 5+ years | $65,000 – $82,000 | $31 – $39 |
| SPD Manager / Director | 8+ years | $75,000 – $105,000 | $36 – $50 |
| Travel SPT | Varies | $65,000 – $85,000+ | $32 – $45 (blended) |
Key takeaway: The jump from uncertified to CRCST-certified typically represents a 15–25% pay increase at the same facility. Senior techs with CHL (Certified Healthcare Leader) or CIS (Certified Instrument Specialist) credentials in high-volume surgical environments regularly exceed $65,000, and SPD managers at large health systems approach or exceed six figures in major markets.
Pay varies significantly by title, certification, and facility type within sterile processing. Below are national average figures sourced from BLS, Salary.com, ZipRecruiter, and Glassdoor data as of early 2026.
| Job Title | National Avg Annual Salary |
|---|---|
| Sterile Processing Trainee | $32,000 – $40,000 |
| Sterile Processing Technician I | $41,450 ($35,876 – $47,566) |
| Sterile Processing Technician II (CRCST) | $46,000 – $55,000 |
| Central Sterile Tech / CS Tech | $44,000 – $56,000 |
| Instrument Processing Tech | $42,000 – $54,000 |
| CIS-Certified Instrument Specialist | $52,000 – $68,000 |
| Lead Sterile Processing Technician | $55,000 – $70,000 |
| Travel Sterile Processing Technician | $65,000 – $85,000+ |
| SPD Supervisor | $65,000 – $82,000 |
| SPD Manager | $75,000 – $95,000 |
| SPD Director | $90,000 – $120,000 |
Hospital vs. surgical center: Hospital-based SPTs typically earn 8–15% more than those working in ambulatory surgical centers (ASCs), reflecting higher case complexity, sterilization volume, and around-the-clock shift requirements. However, some high-volume ASCs in competitive markets have closed that gap to attract and retain certified staff.
These are the 15 largest U.S. cities by population, with salary ranges for certified sterile processing technicians. Healthcare labor market density, union presence, and local cost of living all influence the spread within each market.
| City | State | Avg Annual Salary (Certified SPT) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| New York, NY | NY | $58,000 – $78,000 | Among the highest nationally; 1199SEIU union coverage elevates baseline wages significantly |
| Los Angeles, CA | CA | $55,000 – $74,000 | Year-round surgical volume; SEIU-UHW presence in major health systems |
| Chicago, IL | IL | $52,000 – $70,000 | Strong union market; Northwestern, Rush, and UChicago Medicine drive competitive wages |
| Houston, TX | TX | $44,000 – $60,000 | High surgical volume from large medical center; non-union market dominates |
| Phoenix, AZ | AZ | $44,000 – $60,000 | Fast-growing market; Banner Health and HonorHealth are major employers |
| Philadelphia, PA | PA | $50,000 – $66,000 | Dense hospital market; Penn Medicine and Jefferson Health pay above regional average |
| San Antonio, TX | TX | $42,000 – $56,000 | Military medical centers add stable institutional demand |
| San Diego, CA | CA | $52,000 – $70,000 | VA facilities, Scripps, and Sharp HealthCare drive consistent SPT demand |
| Dallas, TX | TX | $45,000 – $62,000 | Fast-growing surgical center market; Baylor Scott & White is a major employer |
| San Jose, CA | CA | $58,000 – $76,000 | High cost of living reflected in pay; Stanford Health Care proximity elevates wages |
| Austin, TX | TX | $44,000 – $60,000 | Growing surgical center volume as population expands rapidly |
| Jacksonville, FL | FL | $40,000 – $54,000 | Growing market; wages trail the national certified average |
| Fort Worth, TX | TX | $43,000 – $58,000 | JPS Health and Texas Health Resources are primary employers |
| Columbus, OH | OH | $44,000 – $58,000 | OhioHealth and Nationwide Children's Hospital drive demand |
| Charlotte, NC | NC | $42,000 – $56,000 | Atrium Health is the dominant employer; market growing with population |
| State | Notes |
|---|---|
| California | Highest or near-highest nationally; SEIU density and state labor laws push wages well above average |
| New York | 1199SEIU coverage at major health systems elevates baseline; NYC premium is significant |
| Massachusetts | Dense academic medical center market; MGH, Brigham and Women's, and Boston Children's drive wages up |
| Washington | Pacific Northwest healthcare labor shortage pushes competitive offers statewide |
| Alaska | Remote premium and limited local talent pool push wages above national average |
| Connecticut | Dense hospital and surgical center base relative to population; above-average baseline wages |
| New Jersey | Proximity to NYC labor market; major health systems competing for certified SPTs |
| Maryland | NIH, Johns Hopkins, and University of Maryland Medical System anchor a high-wage market |
| Oregon | OHSU and PeaceHealth drive above-average wages; shortage of certified techs statewide |
| Colorado | Growing Front Range population fueling surgical volume and SPT demand |
| State | Notes |
|---|---|
| Mississippi | Near-lowest nationally; limited major health system density and lower COL |
| Arkansas | Small certified talent pool but wages reflect lower cost of living and limited urban centers |
| West Virginia | Limited commercial healthcare density outside Charleston and Morgantown |
| Alabama | Below-average hourly rates statewide per BLS data |
| South Carolina | Growing market but wages still lag most of the Southeast |
Travel SPT roles represent the highest-earning tier in sterile processing and have grown significantly as hospitals struggle to maintain certified staffing. Key details for 2026:
Beyond experience and location, these factors consistently push SPT compensation higher.
CRCST (Certified Registered Central Service Technician): The foundational certification issued by IAHCSMM. Required for advancement at most hospital systems and directly correlates with a $3–$6/hr pay increase over uncertified techs at the same facility. Renewal requires 10 continuing education hours annually.
CIS (Certified Instrument Specialist): Demonstrates advanced knowledge of surgical instrumentation. Held by a smaller portion of the SPT workforce and commands a measurable pay premium, particularly at high-volume surgical hospitals and specialty surgical centers.
CHL (Certified Healthcare Leader): The leadership-track credential from IAHCSMM. Required or strongly preferred for supervisor and manager roles. SPD supervisors without CHL credentials are increasingly passed over for advancement at larger health systems.
CSPDT (Certified Sterile Processing and Distribution Technician): The CBSPD-issued alternative to CRCST. Accepted at most facilities but CRCST remains the more widely recognized credential in hospital hiring.
Surgical Robotics Instrument Processing: Techs trained on da Vinci and other robotic surgical system instrumentation are in high demand at facilities expanding their robotic surgery programs. This is an emerging specialization with a pay premium.
Large academic medical centers and Level I trauma hospitals typically pay 10–20% more than community hospitals or small ASCs for the same certification level.
Federal and VA facilities offer stable pay with federal benefits packages that are difficult to match in the private sector.
High-volume ambulatory surgical centers in competitive markets have begun matching hospital pay to reduce turnover among certified techs.
Evening, night, and weekend shifts consistently add $1.50–$4.00/hr above base pay at most hospital systems. For full-time techs on overnight or rotating shifts, annual shift differential can add $5,000–$10,000 to total compensation. This is one of the most overlooked factors in SPT total earnings comparisons.
Demand for certified sterile processing technicians is outpacing the supply of credentialed workers, which continues to drive wages upward nationally. Key drivers include:
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Salary data sourced from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Salary.com, ZipRecruiter, Glassdoor, PayScale, and IAHCSMM workforce data. Figures reflect 2026 market data and represent averages; individual pay will vary based on employer, certifications, shift, union status, and local market conditions.