FL · SOC 27-3041 · Most current data

Editors Salary in Florida

Median Annual Salary $64,380 -14% below national average (national: $75,260)
$77,390Mean Annual
$31Median Hourly
4,000Employed in State

Florida ranks 17th of 50 states and D.C. for editors pay, trailing top-paying New York ($98,620) by $34,240 — a 53% gap.

Editors are less concentrated in Florida than the U.S. average — a location quotient of 0.66 means the occupation's share of local jobs is 1.52× below the national share.

Florida employs roughly 4.2% of all editors in the country (4,000 workers).

Salary Range: 10th to 90th Percentile

$64,380
$35,780
10th pct.
$134,080
90th pct.

Full Percentile Breakdown

PercentileAnnual WageHourly Wage
10th percentile (entry-level)$35,780$17.20
25th percentile$49,440$23.77
50th percentile (median)$64,380$30.95
75th percentile$89,990$43.26
90th percentile (top earners)$134,080$64.46
Mean (average)$77,390$37.21

How Florida Compares

StateMedian Annualvs. Florida
Florida (current) $64,380 n/a
New York $98,620 +53%
Delaware $91,700 +42%
California $90,570 +41%
Washington $85,250 +32%
Connecticut $81,910 +27%
District of Columbia $81,580 +27%
Virginia $79,080 +23%
Massachusetts $78,720 +22%

Showing top-paying states with available data. View all states →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average Editors salary in Florida?

The mean editors salary in Florida is $77,390 per year. The median (middle) salary is $64,380 per year.

What is the starting salary for a Editors in Florida?

Entry-level editorss (10th percentile) in Florida typically earn around $35,780 per year. Workers at the 25th percentile earn approximately $49,440 per year.

What is the highest Editors salary in Florida?

Top earners (90th percentile) in this occupation in Florida make approximately $134,080 per year. Those in the 75th percentile earn around $89,990 per year.

How does the Florida Editors salary compare to the national average?

The median editors salary in Florida is $64,380, which is -14% below national average of $75,260.

Figures use the most current federal occupational wage survey. All wages are estimates; actual pay varies by experience, education, and employer. About the data.