How New Jersey compares
The national median wage for social workers is $61,330 (BLS, May 2024), well above the $49,500 median for all U.S. occupations. New Jersey's mean wage of $76,180 runs about 24% above that median.
Salary by specialization
"Social worker" covers four BLS specializations, each with a different pay profile. These are national median wages (May 2024); New Jersey pay tracks the same ordering, scaled to the state's wage level.
| Specialization | National median | # Employed (US) |
|---|---|---|
| Social workers, all other | $69,480 | 81,000 |
| Healthcare social workers | $68,090 | 193,200 |
| Mental health & substance abuse social workers | $60,060 | 136,800 |
| Child, family, and school social workers | $58,570 | 399,900 |
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS), May 2024.
The pay range: percentiles
Wages span a wide range depending on experience, licensure, and setting. Nationally, the spread looks like this:
| Percentile | Annual wage | Who's typically here |
|---|---|---|
| 10th (entry) | $41,580 | New BSW-level roles |
| 25th | $49,290 | Early-career, pre-licensure |
| 50th (median) | $61,330 | Licensed, mid-career |
| 75th | $74,600 | Experienced / LCSW |
| 90th (top) | $99,500 | Senior clinicians, administrators |
The band above is national. State-level percentiles for New Jersey can be added from the full BLS OEWS state table when available.
What raises your pay in New Jersey
- Licensure level. Moving from a BSW role to LMSW, then to LCSW, is the biggest lever — LCSWs cluster in the upper half of the range. See the New Jersey licensing guide for the exact path and supervised-hours requirements.
- Setting. Government roles (state, local, federal) typically pay more than nonprofits for equivalent work, and add pension and Public Service Loan Forgiveness eligibility.
- Specialization. Healthcare and "all other" roles pay above child/family/school roles; the gap is real money over a career.
- Experience & CEUs. Staying current on continuing education keeps your license active and supports advancement — track it free with the CEU tracker.
Frequently asked questions
How much do social workers make in New Jersey?
Social workers in New Jersey earn a mean annual wage of $76,180 according to the BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (May 2024). Pay ranges widely by license level, specialization, and setting; the national percentile band runs from $41,580 (10th percentile) to $99,500 (90th).
Which social work specialization pays the most?
Nationally, “Social workers, all other” ($69,480 median) and healthcare social workers ($68,090 median) pay the most, while child, family, and school social workers earn the least ($58,570 median). The same ordering generally holds in New Jersey.
Do I need a license to earn more as a social worker in New Jersey?
Yes — advancing to LMSW and then LCSW is the biggest driver of higher pay, opening clinical roles that cluster in the upper half of the wage range. See the New Jersey licensing guide for the exact requirements and supervised-hours rules.
Is New Jersey a good state for social work pay?
New Jersey's mean social work wage of $76,180 is above the national median of $61,330, placing New Jersey among the higher-paying states (ranked #5 nationally by mean wage). Remember to compare salary to local cost of living, not just to other states.
Sources: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (OEWS), May 2024; BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook: Social Workers (May 2024).