As of June 2026, Elevator and Escalator Installers and Repairers has an AI-exposure score of 50/100 (Elevated exposure) on the AI-Safe Careers index, blending O*NET tasks, the Anthropic Economic Index, the Penn/OpenAI study, and BLS data. This is an estimate of task exposure, not a prediction of job loss.
Elevator and Escalator Installers and Repairers
More exposed than 33% of the roles we track. Median pay ~US$109,910. About 2,000 projected openings a year (BLS 2024–34 — growth plus replacement).
Pay & demand figures are US medians (BLS, in USD) — your local figures will differ. Your exposure score applies broadly.
How you compare to similar Construction roles
Your tasks, by AI exposure
No automatable tasks identified for this role — its real, individually-assessed tasks consistently read as augmentable (75%).
- Maintain log books that detail all repairs and checks performed.
- Check that safety regulations and building codes are met, and complete service reports verifying conformance to standards.
- Operate elevators to determine power demands, and test power consumption to detect overload factors.
- Assemble, install, repair, and maintain elevators, escalators, moving sidewalks, and dumbwaiters, using hand and power tools, and testing devices such as test lamps, ammeters, and voltmeters.
- Test newly installed equipment to ensure that it meets specifications, such as stopping at floors for set amounts of time.
- Adjust safety controls, counterweights, door mechanisms, and components such as valves, ratchets, seals, and brake linings.
- Disassemble defective units, and repair or replace parts such as locks, gears, cables, and electric wiring.
- Connect car frames to counterweights, using steel cables.
- Attach guide shoes and rollers to minimize the lateral motion of cars as they travel through shafts.
- Assemble elevator cars, installing each car's platform, walls, and doors.
- Locate malfunctions in brakes, motors, switches, and signal and control systems, using test equipment.
- Participate in additional training to keep skills up to date.
- Assemble electrically powered stairs, steel frameworks, and tracks, and install associated motors and electrical wiring.
- Connect electrical wiring to control panels and electric motors.
- Install electrical wires and controls by attaching conduit along shaft walls from floor to floor and pulling plastic-covered wires through the conduit.
- Bolt or weld steel rails to the walls of shafts to guide elevators, working from scaffolding or platforms.
- Read and interpret blueprints to determine the layout of system components, frameworks, and foundations, and to select installation equipment.
- Install outer doors and door frames at elevator entrances on each floor of a structure.
- Cut prefabricated sections of framework, rails, and other components to specified dimensions.
- Inspect wiring connections, control panel hookups, door installations, and alignments and clearances of cars and hoistways to ensure that equipment will operate properly.
Safer adjacent roles
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