Salario de Mecánico Automotriz en California (2026)
El salario promedio de un Mecánico Automotriz en California es de $62,000/año. Después de impuestos, tu sueldo neto estimado es de $50,020/año ($4,168/mes).
Desglose del Sueldo Neto
| Categoría | Cantidad |
|---|---|
Sueldo Neto Anual | $50,020 |
Sueldo Neto Mensual | $4,168 |
Sueldo Neto Quincenal | $1,924 |
Sueldo Neto por Hora basado en 2,080 hrs/año | $24/hr |
Impuesto Federal | $5,260 |
Impuesto Estatal | $1,977 |
Impuestos FICA | $4,743 |
Tasa Efectiva de Impuesto impuestos totales ÷ salario bruto | 19.32% |
¿Quieres modelar 401(k), HSA, o aportes antes de impuestos contra tu salario completo? Abrir la calculadora de salario →
¿Trabajo 1099 o proyectos paralelos? El impuesto SE agrega 15.3% encima. Ver la calculadora de freelancer →
¿Recibes bono de fin de año, firma o retención? Ver la calculadora de bonos →
¿Trabajas horas extra? La deducción OBBBA 2025 puede ahorrarte hasta $12,500 en impuesto federal. Abrir la calculadora de horas extra →
Rangos de Salario de Mecánico Automotriz en California
No todas las Mecánico Automotrizs ganan lo mismo — ni de cerca
California auto mechanic specialties cluster by metro: (1) Bay Area — Tesla Service Centers (Fremont factory + 30+ retail service centers), Stanford Auto / Carlsen Audi luxury dealers, EV-specialty independent shops; (2) LA — luxury dealer service (Beverly Hills Porsche, Beverly Hills BMW, Calabasas Mercedes-Benz, Galpin Auto Sports), independent luxury specialists in Burbank / Glendale / Santa Monica, exotic car specialists in Newport Beach; (3) Central Valley (Fresno, Modesto, Stockton, Bakersfield) — agricultural equipment (Caterpillar, John Deere) + diesel truck repair + Class 8 fleet maintenance; (4) Inland Empire (Riverside, San Bernardino) — warehouse fleet + automotive parts (LKQ, Mavis); (5) San Diego — military adjacent (Marine Corps Camp Pendleton MWR maintenance), border commercial truck inspection at San Ysidro / Otay Mesa POEs. Smog tech endorsement (CA-specific Bureau of Automotive Repair credential) commands $4-$8/hour premium. Top-tier ASE Master Tech + dealer service writer combo earns $90K-$130K. AB5 1099 reclassification specifically targeted auto repair — most CA mechanics now employees, especially at dealers + chain shops.
Tesla Service Tech (Fremont factory + retail centers)
$58,000–$92,000
EV specialty premium · Tesla benefits + RSUs at factory tier
Luxury Dealer Master Tech (BMW/Mercedes/Porsche)
$72,000–$130,000
Beverly Hills/Newport/Calabasas dealers · brand cert premium
EV/Hybrid Specialist (Bay Area independent)
$62,000–$98,000
Fastest-growing CA specialty · high-voltage cert
Diesel Mechanic (Class 8/Long-Haul fleet)
$60,000–$95,000
Central Valley + Inland Empire · agriculture + warehouse fleets
Smog Tech (BAR-licensed)
$48,000–$72,000
CA-specific BAR endorsement · independent shop concentration
Service Writer / Service Advisor
$58,000–$120,000
Commission-based at dealers · top-tier cleared $100K+
Master Tech (ASE certified, 5+ years)
$62,000–$95,000
Independent shops · dealer non-luxury tier
Apprentice / New Tech (year 1-2)
$32,000–$45,000
Building hours toward ASE · often hourly + flag time
Service Manager (dealer)
$85,000–$160,000+
Top dealer service managers earn $150K+ at luxury franchises
Vale la pena saber: California auto mechanic comp structure dominated by 'flag rate' (book hours per repair × shop labor rate) at dealers + chain shops. Mechanic is paid per book hour completed, not actual time — efficient techs at busy luxury dealers can flag 60+ hours/week working 40, earning meaningful upside. CA's labor rate $150-$220/hour at luxury dealers (vs $90-$120 at independent shops). AB5 reclassification (effective 2020) made most CA auto mechanics employees — independent contractor 1099 status preserved only for genuine business owners (mobile mechanics, licensed shops). This affects retirement / tax structure significantly.
Overtime, OBBBA 2025, and CA's daily 8-hour OT rule for FLSA-eligible techs
$12.5K
OBBBA 2025 federal OT premium deduction (single, $25K MFJ; tax years 2025–2028)
8 hrs
CA daily OT trigger — better than the federal 40/week-only floor
13.3%
CA top state tax — and CA may not conform to federal OBBBA deduction
Auto mechanic overtime in California is more aggressive than the federal floor. Under CA Labor Code §510, -eligible techs get 1.5× pay after 8 hours/day OR 40 hours/week (whichever trips first), plus 2× pay after 12 hours/day. Most dealer + chain + Tesla techs are FLSA-covered — the federal Motor Carrier exemption that shields long-haul truck drivers does NOT cover auto mechanics, even those wrenching on commercial trucks at fixed shops. Service writers on pure commission are exempt; service managers above the $1,128/week salary threshold are exempt. The flag-rate complication: techs paid 'flag hours × labor rate' remain entitled to minimum wage AND daily OT on actual hours worked — most CA dealers pay flag bonus PLUS a daily OT premium calculated on the regular rate of pay (averaged per workweek under §510(a)).
The 2025 law (One Big Beautiful Bill Act — yes, that's the actual name) created a brand-new federal above-the-line deduction on the premium portion of -required overtime. Tax years 2025 through 2028 only, capped at $12,500/year (single) or $25,000 (married filing jointly). The deduction targets the 'half' in time-and-a-half — not the full OT paycheck — and applies above-the-line on Form 1040, so techs claim it without itemizing. FICA still applies on the full OT amount; this is income-tax relief only.
Auto-mechanic-specific catches. only applies to wages, not 1099 self-employment income. Post-AB5, virtually every CA dealer, chain, Tesla, and major-brand independent tech is W-2 — they qualify if they actually book OT premium hours. Mobile mechanics still operating as legitimate independent contractors (passing the AB5 ABC test) get nothing from OBBBA. Flag-rate techs whose pay is structured as 'flag bonus on top of hourly + daily OT premium' claim the deduction on the OT premium portion only — flag bonus itself is straight-time enhancement, not OT premium. Verify your W-2 Box 14 and the OT-premium line item on the pay stub before assuming a deduction figure at filing.
Real numbers for a $34/hour Bay Area dealer master tech at a busy luxury franchise (Mercedes-Benz of Stevens Creek, Carlsen Audi Palo Alto, BMW of Mountain View) running 50 hours/week × 50 weeks. CA's daily 8-hour trigger means most 10-hour service-bay days produce 2 hours of daily OT regardless of weekly total. Conservative assumption: 10 OT hours/week × 50 weeks = 500 OT hours. Premium portion (the 'half') at ~$17/hour × 500 = $8,500. Well under the $12,500 single cap — full federal deduction available. At a 22% federal marginal bracket, that's about $1,870 back. Combined with maxing a match at the dealer plan, the federal bite gets noticeably smaller for the working tech.
Two structural catches. First, only — straight-time wages, flag bonus, brand-cert wage premium, and shift differentials don't qualify. The has to specifically break out OT premium for the deduction to land cleanly at filing. Second, phaseout — the single deduction tapers $100 per $1,000 of income over $150K and zeros at $275K (married $300K / $550K). Top SoCal luxury dealer master techs flagging 60+ hours weekly at $130K total comp typically stay under the single threshold; service-writer commission roles at Beverly Hills BMW or Newport Lexus pulling $160K+ can blow past it entirely.
California-specific catch on the state side: California historically does NOT conform automatically to federal above-the-line deductions — each requires explicit FTB conformity legislation. As of mid-2026, CA has not conformed to the OT deduction. Until the FTB issues guidance (likely Q3-Q4 2026), assume California will tax your full OT regardless of the federal carve-out. So OBBBA savings here are federal-only — meaningful but smaller than the same OT premium would deliver in Texas, Nevada, or Florida. Combined with CA's 13.3% top bracket plus the 1.1% no-cap tax (post-SB 951), every premium dollar still carries the full state bite even after the federal deduction.
California for auto mechanics — Tesla EV demand, LA luxury, Central Valley diesel, AB5 framework
California auto mechanics cluster geographically by specialty: Bay Area (Tesla + EV independents + luxury dealers in Palo Alto/Marin), LA (luxury dealers Beverly Hills/Calabasas/Newport, exotic specialists Burbank/Glendale, independent shops San Fernando Valley), Central Valley (diesel + agriculture in Fresno/Modesto/Stockton/Bakersfield), Inland Empire (warehouse fleet maintenance Riverside/San Bernardino), San Diego (military-adjacent Camp Pendleton + border POE truck inspection).
CA Bureau of Automotive Repair (BAR) — California-specific licensing body. Smog tech endorsement is valuable in CA (other states don't require comparable certification). BAR license (auto repair business license) required for any shop charging for repairs. Smog inspection-only shops + auto repair-and-smog combo shops have different BAR license tiers.
CA mechanic lifestyle profile — predominantly post-AB5, hourly + flag rate at dealers, dealer benefits typical (health insurance, match, paid vacation, vehicle discount). Most CA mechanics rent vs buy — Bay Area + LA housing prohibitive on $60K-$80K mechanic income. The exception is Central Valley + Inland Empire where $300K-$450K modest homes are achievable for senior tier ($80K-$100K) mechanics.
Tax structure for CA mechanics: standard withholding at 13.3% top + federal progressive. Schedule C deductions limited to genuinely self-employed mobile / shop-owner operations. The disadvantage vs no-tax states (TX/FL/WA/NV/TN) is meaningful — a $70K CA mechanic nets ~$50K vs $58K in TX. Over a 25-year career, $200K-$300K of cumulative state tax differential.
How California taxes work for auto mechanics (and how to keep more)
Most CA auto mechanics are employees post-AB5 (2020). At a $65,000 wage: federal income tax ~$5,500 + $4,973 (employee half) + CA state tax ~$2,100 = ~$12,500 total tax. Take-home roughly $52,500 ($4,375/month). The 13.3% CA top tax doesn't apply at $65K (top kicks in at $1M+); effective CA rate at $65K is ~3.2%.
AB5 effect on retirement: as , employer pays the other half of (saves $4,973/year vs 1099 self-employed). Employer-sponsored (typical at dealer + Tesla, less common at independent shops) with 3-6% match is meaningful — captures employer match + tax-deferred growth. The AB5 shift from 1099 to W-2 was net-positive for most CA mechanics on retirement-savings access.
Schedule A itemized deductions: most CA mechanics take standard deduction ($15K single / $30K 2026) — itemizing rarely beats it unless mortgage interest + property tax + charity exceeds those thresholds. CA standard deduction $5,540 single / $11,080 MFJ. Note that work-related tools/uniforms are NOT deductible for employees post- 2018 (eliminated unreimbursed employee expense deduction). Mechanic toolbox expenses ($5K-$50K personal investment over career) historically deductible, no longer.
Section 199A 20% deduction: applies ONLY to genuinely self-employed mobile mechanics or shop owners with Schedule C income. Doesn't apply to dealer / Tesla / independent shop mechanics. For the small minority of CA mechanics still operating as independent contractors (mobile mechanics with diverse client base meeting AB5 ABC test), QBI applies and saves 20% on net SE income.
Tool reimbursement programs: many CA dealers + chains offer tool reimbursement / tool allowance ($500-$2,000/year) — verify with HR. This is non-taxable income (employer-provided tools/PPE) vs taxable wages. Worth maximizing.
- →Max your match if available — at $65K with 4% match, that's $2,600/year of free money. At dealer + Tesla, typically 3-6% match available.