FL · SOC 13-2072 · Most current data

Loan Officers Salary in Florida

Median Annual Salary $71,340 -4% below national average (national: $74,180)
$82,250Mean Annual
$34Median Hourly
19,750Employed in State

Florida ranks 32nd of 51 states and D.C. for loan officers pay, trailing top-paying District of Columbia ($102,200) by $30,860 — a 43% gap.

Florida employs roughly 6.8% of all loan officers in the country (19,750 workers).

Salary Range: 10th to 90th Percentile

$71,340
$33,900
10th pct.
$135,450
90th pct.

Full Percentile Breakdown

PercentileAnnual WageHourly Wage
10th percentile (entry-level)$33,900$16.30
25th percentile$49,630$23.86
50th percentile (median)$71,340$34.30
75th percentile$99,730$47.95
90th percentile (top earners)$135,450$65.12
Mean (average)$82,250$39.54

How Florida Compares

StateMedian Annualvs. Florida
Florida (current) $71,340 n/a
District of Columbia $102,200 +43%
New York $98,940 +39%
New Jersey $95,090 +33%
Massachusetts $93,430 +31%
Vermont $86,490 +21%
Minnesota $84,480 +18%
North Dakota $82,990 +16%
Kansas $82,540 +16%

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

Related Occupations in Florida

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the average Loan Officers salary in Florida?

The mean loan officers salary in Florida is $82,250 per year. The median (middle) salary is $71,340 per year.

What is the starting salary for a Loan Officers in Florida?

Entry-level loan officerss (10th percentile) in Florida typically earn around $33,900 per year. Workers at the 25th percentile earn approximately $49,630 per year.

What is the highest Loan Officers salary in Florida?

Top earners (90th percentile) in this occupation in Florida make approximately $135,450 per year. Those in the 75th percentile earn around $99,730 per year.

How does the Florida Loan Officers salary compare to the national average?

The median loan officers salary in Florida is $71,340, which is -4% below national average of $74,180.

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