Salario de Maestro en Massachusetts (2026)
El salario promedio de un Maestro en Massachusetts es de $92,000/año. Después de impuestos, tu sueldo neto estimado es de $69,172/año ($5,764/mes).
Desglose del Sueldo Neto
| Categoría | Cantidad |
|---|---|
Sueldo Neto Anual | $69,172 |
Sueldo Neto Mensual | $5,764 |
Sueldo Neto Quincenal | $2,660 |
Sueldo Neto por Hora basado en 2,080 hrs/año | $33/hr |
Impuesto Federal | $11,410 |
Impuesto Estatal | $4,380 |
Impuestos FICA | $7,038 |
Tasa Efectiva de Impuesto impuestos totales ÷ salario bruto | 24.81% |
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Rangos de Salario de Maestro en Massachusetts
No todas las Maestros ganan lo mismo — ni de cerca
MA teaching segments by district tier and metro. The Boston-adjacent premium suburbs (Wellesley, Newton, Brookline, Lexington, Concord-Carlisle, Weston, Belmont, Winchester, Wayland) are the top-pay tier — $82-130K mid-career with $12-25K local supplement above state schedule. Cambridge Public Schools and Somerville Public Schools anchor urban-academic mid-tier. Boston Public Schools (BPS, ~50K students) and Worcester Public Schools urban tier $58-95K. Western MA (Springfield, Pittsfield) sits at the floor at $52-72K mid-career. Master's degree premium standard at most districts.
Elementary Teacher (0–5 yrs)
$52,000–$72,000
Starting salary varies — Wellesley $68K vs western MA $52K · MTRS contribution begins immediately
Elementary Teacher (10+ yrs)
$78,000–$112,000
Step increases reward longevity · Master's + 30 credits standard mid-career
Secondary / HS Teacher (STEM)
$62,000–$130,000
Math, CS, physics premium in shortage districts · Wellesley / Newton / Lexington top
Special Education Teacher
$60,000–$110,000
Statewide shortage — stipends $3-8K above base · MA Educator Loan Repayment available
School Psychologist
$80,000–$132,000
Credential shortage drives premium · UMass Boston + BU + Northeastern programs
Speech-Language Pathologist
$75,000–$118,000
High demand · CCC-SLP + MA license required
Bilingual / ESL Teacher
$58,000–$92,000
Stipend $3-6K above base · concentrated Lawrence / Lynn / Chelsea / Boston growth
Department Head / Instructional Coach
$85,000–$128,000
Leadership stipends $8-15K above base teacher salary
Substitute Teacher (daily)
$130–$240/day
Long-term sub rates often higher · MA virtual school day rates
Community College Instructor
$58,000–$95,000
Bunker Hill CC, Bristol CC, Holyoke CC · MCCC-affiliated
Vale la pena saber: MTRS (Massachusetts Teachers' Retirement System, ~$30B AUM, ~95K active + retired members) operates on a tiered structure. Tier 1 (pre-2012 hires) is the richest — 2.5% × Final Average Salary × years × age factor at full retirement, with vesting at 10 years and full retirement age 60-65 depending on hire date. Tier 5 (post-2012 hires) is leaner — 2.0% × FAS × years × age factor, vesting at 10 years, and the age factor compresses pre-67 retirement. The 2012 reform meaningfully reduced retirement income for new hires. The MA-specific carve-out: MTRS members do NOT participate in Social Security under the 1951 carve-out (one of 15 US states), so retirement income rests entirely on MTRS plus voluntary /. Government Pension Offset and Windfall Elimination Provision affect any spousal or non-MTRS Social Security claims. MTA (Massachusetts Teachers Association) and AFT-MA are the two primary educator unions. Recent contract cycles in Wellesley + Newton + Lexington won 12-18% raises over 3 years.
OBBBA overtime, MTRS without Social Security, and Massachusetts's 5% flat + Millionaires Tax stack
5%
MA flat state tax + 4% Millionaires Tax surtax above $1.083M (2026)
No SS
MA teachers do NOT participate in Social Security — entire retirement on MTRS + 403(b)/457(b)
$87K
MA average teacher salary — second-highest US after NJ; Wellesley/Newton tier $98-130K mid-career
Classroom teaching hours are -exempt under the professional/teacher exemption — your contract day doesn't generate overtime pay. Coaching stipends, club advisor stipends, summer school flat-rate teaching, and ESY (Extended School Year) special-ed work paid as additional assignments may or may not qualify for depending on whether they're flat-rate vs hourly. Hourly tutoring (district-paid after-school, Title I, ESL pull-out hourly) is the slice most likely to qualify.
The 2025 law (One Big Beautiful Bill Act) created a brand-new federal deduction on the premium portion of overtime pay. For tax years 2025 through 2028, you can deduct up to $12,500/year (single) or $25,000 (married filing jointly) of qualifying OT premium from your federal taxable income. Premium portion = the half of time-and-a-half. If you tutor at $48/hour and the district pays you 1.5× for hours above 40/week aggregate work, only the extra $24/hour counts toward the deduction.
Real numbers for a Wellesley Public Schools math teacher at $98K base + $7K coaching + $4K summer school + $5K hourly tutoring = $16K supplemental income. Roughly 1/3 of that ($4,500-$5,500) typically qualifies as the -required OT premium portion. Single filer at the 24% federal bracket → about $1,100-$1,300 federal back annually. MA's flat 5% likely conforms (MA starts from federal ; state-level OT guidance still being issued through 2026), adding another $230 of state savings if confirmed.
MA teacher phaseout: the deduction phases out above $150K single / $300K . Most MA teachers (median $87K) stay under for single filers; senior premium-suburb teachers + admin tracks at $130-220K with side income may push close to or through the threshold. The 4% Millionaires Tax surtax kicks in above $1.083M (2026 threshold) — irrelevant for nearly all teachers but a real consideration for senior admin track + dual-income households.
Massachusetts for teachers — the honest take
MA teaching splits into three distinct markets. Boston-adjacent premium suburbs (Wellesley, Newton, Brookline, Lexington, Concord-Carlisle, Weston, Belmont, Winchester, Wayland) are the highest-pay tier — $82-130K mid-career with $12-25K local supplement above state schedule. These are top-tier US suburban districts (Wellesley HS, Newton South, Lexington HS, Boston Latin all top-50 US public schools). Cambridge Public Schools, Somerville Public Schools, and Brookline anchor urban-academic mid-tier with strong unionization. Boston Public Schools (BPS, ~50K students) and Worcester Public Schools urban tier $58-95K with + Title I + state loan forgiveness. Western MA (Springfield, Holyoke, Pittsfield, North Adams) sits at the floor — $52-72K mid-career.
Boston-adjacent housing is brutal at teacher comp. Wellesley / Newton / Lexington / Concord 4BR family homes run $1.2M-$2.2M, with the very-top-tier streets exceeding $3M. Brookline condos $700K-$1.4M for 2BR. Most senior MA teachers commute from MetroWest exurbs (Framingham, Natick, Westborough, Hopkinton) at $700K-$1.1M, or push further to Worcester County (Worcester, Shrewsbury, Holden) at $475-700K. The Wellesley/Newton still doesn't fully offset the housing premium — a $115K Wellesley senior teacher with a $1.5M Wellesley home is house-poor compared to a $87K Worcester teacher with a $475K Worcester home, despite the wage gap.
Cambridge / Somerville is the under-the-radar MA option — strong districts (Cambridge Public Schools is competitive with Wellesley/Newton on educational outcomes), urban academic adjacency (Harvard + MIT + Tufts), $700K-$1.4M condo market, and walkable / T-accessible lifestyle. Many young MA teachers prefer this over the suburb track. North Shore alternatives (Marblehead, Swampscott, Lynnfield, Beverly) at $625K-$1.1M with strong districts and ocean lifestyle.
Western MA is the genuine affordability play. Springfield Public Schools, Holyoke Public Schools, and surrounding districts at $52-72K mid-career — but housing $300-500K for substantial 4BR homes. Net of housing, a $68K Holyoke senior teacher often beats a $115K Wellesley senior teacher on real income. The trade is the much smaller employer base + less academic-medical-corporate adjacency.
Most senior MA teachers retire out-of-state. MA taxes / IRA / pension distributions at the flat 5% (with no significant retirement income exemption), and the highest-in-region property tax (1.04% effective on Boston-adjacent $1.5M+ homes is $15K+/year) grinds through retirement. Common destinations: NH (0% income tax + nearby), Florida (Sarasota, Naples), Maine (Portland area, lower COL), Vermont (Burlington, lower-COL Northeast Kingdom). home-sale exclusion ($500K federal-tax-free) on the MA home sale captures most of the equity unlock; the move out captures the property tax escape.
How Massachusetts taxes work for teachers (and the MTRS + no-SS retirement reality)
Massachusetts charges a flat 5% state income tax on most income, plus a 4% Millionaires Tax surtax above $1.083M (2026 threshold). For a $87K mid-career MA teacher, total MA tax is ~$4,200 (4.83% effective after deductions). For a $115K Wellesley senior teacher, ~$5,560. For a $145K admin-track principal, ~$7,000. The Millionaires Tax kicks in above $1.083M and is irrelevant for nearly all teachers — but real for senior admin + dual-income households where combined income crosses the threshold. Each non-resident district worker pays MA tax on MA-earned wages plus their home-state's tax.
MTRS (Massachusetts Teachers' Retirement System) is the central MA teacher financial story. Tier 1 (pre-2012 hires) is the richer plan — 2.5% × Final Average Salary × years × age factor at full retirement, vesting at 10 years, full retirement at age 60-65. Tier 5 (post-2012 hires) is leaner — 2.0% × FAS × years × age factor, plus the age factor compresses pre-67 retirement. A 30-year career on Tier 5 at $98K FAS produces roughly $58K/year DB pension, vs ~$74K/year on Tier 1 — meaningful difference for hire-date generations.
The critical MA teacher caveat: NO Social Security participation. Under the 1951 MTRS carve-out (one of 15 US states), MA public school teachers do not pay into or accrue Social Security. The Government Pension Offset (GPO) reduces any spousal SS benefits by 2/3 of your MTRS pension. Windfall Elimination Provision (WEP) reduces your own SS benefit if you have substantial earnings outside teaching. Practical impact: your retirement income is essentially MTRS + / + IRA — there is no SS supplement. Maxing 403(b) + 457(b) is critically important relative to teachers in SS-participating states.
MA conforms federal on / / — pre-tax deferrals reduce both federal and MA taxable income. Most MA school districts offer 403(b); larger districts (Boston, Cambridge, Newton, Wellesley, Worcester) also offer 457(b). Combined limit $47K/year federal pre-tax. At a $98K MA teacher rate ~29% combined federal+MA, maxing both saves ~$13,600/year in tax — and given no SS, this is essential, not optional. MA does NOT conform federal HSA — HSA contributions and earnings are MA-state-taxable, reducing the net HSA benefit.
MA taxes pension and distributions at the flat 5% (no major retirement income exemption like PA's $0 or IL's full exemption), Social Security is fully exempt. A senior MA teacher retiring with $58K MTRS pension pays roughly $2,900 in MA state tax — moderate, but the property tax burden on a Boston-adjacent home grinds through retirement. The combination of 5% state on retirement income + high property tax (1.04% effective on $1.5M+ homes is $15K+/year) is why most senior MA teachers retire out-of-state.
- →Max AND at large MA districts — $47K combined federal pre-tax. ESSENTIAL given no Social Security; voluntary retirement savings replace what SS provides for teachers in other states.
- →Pursue Wellesley / Newton / Brookline / Lexington / Concord-Carlisle / Weston / Belmont / Winchester — top US suburban district pay with $12-25K local supplement above state schedule.
- → eligibility — 100% of MA public school districts qualify. 10 years qualifying payments → tax-free forgiveness on remaining federal student loan balance.
- →MA Educator Loan Repayment Program for shortage-area teaching (special ed, STEM, ESL, urban districts) up to $25K stackable with .
- →MTRS Tier verification — Tier 1 hires (pre-2012) keep richer formula; verify your tier with MTRS, especially for service-credit purchase decisions.
- →Understand GPO + WEP impact on any spousal or non-teaching Social Security claims — consult with retirement-specialist CPA before age 60.
- →Consider Cambridge / Somerville urban-academic positions — strong districts, BU/Tufts/Harvard adjunct opportunities for supplemental income, walkable urban life vs Boston suburb housing premium.
- →Pre-retirement relocation to NH / FL / ME / VT — $500K exclusion + MTRS pension stream + IRA-rollover to a 0%-state (NH on wages, FL/TN on everything). Document residency carefully.
Three Massachusetts teacher markets — what each one looks like
MA teacher geography splits into Boston-adjacent premium suburbs, Cambridge/Somerville urban-academic, and Western/Central MA. Pay overlaps at the high end but housing math + COL diverge enormously.
Boston-Adjacent Premium (Wellesley / Newton / Brookline / Lexington / Concord-Carlisle / Weston)
Starting $58-72K · mid-career $82-115K · senior $98-130K + admin track $145-220KWellesley Public Schools, Newton Public Schools (Newton North + Newton South), Brookline Public Schools, Lexington Public Schools, Concord-Carlisle Regional, Weston Public Schools, Belmont Public Schools, Winchester Public Schools, Wayland Public Schools. Top-tier US suburban districts (Wellesley HS, Newton South HS, Lexington HS, Boston Latin all top-50 US public schools). MTA-organized contract floors with binding arbitration; recent cycles winning 12-18% raises over 3 years.
Boston-adjacent housing $1.2M-$2.2M for 4BR family homes; very-top-tier streets exceed $3M. Most senior teachers commute from MetroWest exurbs (Framingham, Natick, Westborough, Hopkinton) at $700K-$1.1M for the housing math. The $130K Wellesley premium-tier comp is structurally lucrative on absolute basis but heavily housing-constrained.
Cambridge / Somerville / North Shore — Urban-Academic + Coastal
Starting $55-68K · mid-career $75-105K · senior $90-118K + admin track $130-185KCambridge Public Schools (competitive with Wellesley/Newton on educational outcomes), Somerville Public Schools, Brookline Public Schools (overlaps with Boston-adjacent tier above), plus North Shore alternatives (Marblehead, Swampscott, Lynnfield, Beverly, Manchester-Essex). Cambridge gives Harvard + MIT adjacency; Tufts at Medford. CTA (Cambridge Teachers Association) and STA (Somerville Teachers Association) are strong AFT-MA locals.
Cambridge / Somerville condo market $700K-$1.4M for 2BR — workforce housing realistic on senior comp. North Shore (Marblehead, Swampscott) at $625K-$1.1M with ocean lifestyle. The under-the-radar MA option for teachers prioritizing walkable urban life or coastal access over Boston-suburb prestige.
Worcester / Western MA — Affordability + Smaller Employer Base
Starting $52-62K · mid-career $58-78K · senior $72-92K + admin track $108-148KWorcester Public Schools (~25K students), Springfield Public Schools (~25K students, the second-largest MA district), Holyoke Public Schools, Pittsfield Public Schools, Holyoke + Springfield Diocesan schools, plus regional rural districts. Smaller MTA locals at most districts; AFT-affiliates at urban districts (Worcester, Springfield). Strong + Title I + MA Educator Loan Repayment availability across western MA shortage areas.
Worcester County (Shrewsbury, Holden, Westborough) housing $475-700K — substantial 4BR family homes on a teacher's paycheck, vs Wellesley equivalent at $1.5M. Western MA (Pittsfield, Greenfield) at $300-500K. Net of housing math, western MA teaching often beats Boston-adjacent on real income post-housing despite lower nominal pay.
The Massachusetts teacher career arc — credential to MTRS retirement
Year 1-2 (new teacher): $52-72K depending on district tier. MA teaching license (DESE Department of Elementary and Secondary Education) requires bachelor's + state-approved teacher prep + MTEL subject tests + clearances. MTRS membership begins immediately — Tier 5 (post-2012) is the default tier. Premium suburb districts (Wellesley, Newton, Lexington) competitive entry; BPS and Worcester less competitive but still strong demand. MA Educator Loan Repayment available for shortage-area placements.
Year 3-7 (early career): $65-98K. Step increases on the salary schedule reward longevity hard. Most MA districts require Master's-in-progress within 5 years for permanent teaching license. M+15, M+30, M+60, CAGS columns add $5-25K above BA-only at top of schedule. Specialty cert + coaching stipends + summer school + ESY hourly add $4-15K to base. Maxing + at large districts is essential given no Social Security backup.
Year 7-15 (senior teacher / department head / instructional coach): $82-118K (premium suburbs $98-130K). Department head + instructional coach + curriculum coordinator + induction mentor stipends add $8-15K above teaching base. National Board Certification stipend $4-10K at most large MA districts. MTRS years-of-service compounding hard toward Tier 5 formula (2.0% × FAS × years × age factor).
Year 15-25 (department chair / building admin / district leadership): $108-220K. Building principal at MA suburb $128-175K (premium suburbs $148-220K). Curriculum director / assistant superintendent $135-185K. MA superintendent track $148-310K (large districts).
Retirement (60-67): MTRS pension is the central retirement income — Tier 5 hires get smaller pension than Tier 1. MA taxes pension at flat 5% (no major exemption). Plus: NO Social Security backup means voluntary / / IRA accumulation is essential. Property tax 1.04% on $1.5M+ Boston-adjacent home = $15K+/year, which is why most senior MA teachers retire out-of-state to NH (0% wages) / FL / VT / ME for the property tax + state income tax escape.
Where Massachusetts teachers actually live
MA teacher housing is dominated by district-of-employment selection. Wellesley / Newton / Lexington teachers commute from MetroWest exurbs (Framingham, Natick, Westborough) for housing math. Cambridge / Somerville teachers in walkable urban condos. Worcester County teachers in the under-the-radar Worcester / Shrewsbury / Holden affordability tier.
Wellesley / Newton / Brookline (Boston-adjacent premium)
Wellesley PS / Newton PS / Brookline PS top US districts · $1.2M-$2.2M family homes · top-50 US public schools
Lexington / Concord-Carlisle / Weston
Lexington HS / Concord-Carlisle / Weston PS · $1M-$1.8M · top-tier MA districts
Framingham / Natick / Westborough (MetroWest)
Wellesley/Newton commute · $700K-$1.1M · housing math escape
Cambridge / Somerville (urban academic)
Cambridge PS / Somerville PS strong districts · $700K-$1.4M condo · Harvard + MIT + Tufts adjacency
North Shore (Marblehead / Swampscott / Lynnfield)
Strong districts · $625K-$1.1M · ocean lifestyle · 30-45 min Boston commute
Worcester County (Shrewsbury / Holden / Westborough)
Worcester PS / Shrewsbury PS · $475-700K · meaningful affordability vs Boston-adjacent
Most senior MA teachers retire out-of-state — NH (0% wage tax + nearby), Florida, Vermont, Maine. The 5% MA state on retirement income + 1.04% property tax on Boston-adjacent housing makes the late-career math worse than the working-career math.
¿Es la decisión correcta?
Massachusetts teaching — who it's best for
A tu favor
- +Wellesley / Newton / Brookline / Lexington premium suburbs $98-130K mid-career — among top US suburban teacher pay
- +MTA + AFT-MA among strongest US teacher unions — recent cycles winning 12-18% raises over 3 years
- +Top-50 US public schools cluster (Wellesley HS, Newton South, Lexington HS, Boston Latin) provide best US teaching environment
- +MA fully conforms federal on 403(b) / 457(b) — pre-tax savings reduce both federal and MA taxable income
- +PSLF + MA Educator Loan Repayment up to $25K stackable for shortage areas
- +Cambridge / Somerville urban-academic alternative provides Harvard + MIT + Tufts adjacency without Boston-suburb housing premium
Vale la pena saber antes de firmar
- −MA teachers do NOT participate in Social Security — entire retirement income rests on MTRS + voluntary 403(b)/457(b)
- −MTRS Tier 5 (post-2012 hires) materially leaner than Tier 1 — 2.0% × FAS × years × age factor vs 2.5% Tier 1
- −Boston-adjacent housing genuinely doesn't work on most teacher comp — Wellesley / Newton 4BR family $1.2M-$2.2M
- −MA does NOT conform federal HSA — HSA contributions + earnings state-taxable as ordinary income (one of two states with NJ)
- −MA flat 5% on retirement income + property tax 1.04% on $1.5M+ Boston-adjacent homes drives most senior teachers to retire out-of-state
- −GPO + WEP affect spousal Social Security claims and any non-teaching SS earnings — meaningful planning friction
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