Arizona Community Colleges
Welding Technology Programs
Welding technology programs at community colleges in this state. Career-track training for AWS-certified welders.
5 colleges · 75 sections · 32 unique courses · Summer 2026 · Updated today
Welding programs at Arizona community colleges are among the most direct paths from enrollment to a full-time skilled-trade job in the state. Most Public 2-year welding programs are one-year diploma or two-year AAS sequences aligned to AWS (American Welding Society) certifications — SMAW (stick), GMAW (MIG), GTAW (TIG), and FCAW (flux-cored). The 75 sections at 5 institutions this term combine bench-work hours with metallurgy theory and blueprint reading.
Welders graduating with AWS certifications step into manufacturing, pipeline, structural-steel, and shipyard jobs without needing further education. Pay is competitive (often above other CC-trade tracks), demand outpaces supply in most Arizona metro areas, and the certification stacking — adding pipe, aluminum, and underwater certifications over time — keeps the career growing.
Colleges offering Welding Technology
Pick a college to see its full plan — every required course, which ones transfer to the school you want, and what’s open now.
Welding Technology is a transfer program — community colleges offer the coursework; you earn the degree, and its earnings, at a four-year university. See where it transfers →
| College | Sections | Courses | Online |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mohave Community College | 59 | 19 | — |
| Cochise County Community College District | 6 | 6 | — |
| Pima Community College | 6 | 5 | — |
| Yavapai College | 3 | 2 | — |
| Mesa Community College | 1 | 1 | — |
Welding Technology Availability Snapshot
How welding technology sections are being offered across 5 colleges in Arizona this term (75 sections total).
Delivery format
- in person74 (99%)
- hybrid1 (1%)
When sections meet
- Morning (before noon)31
- Afternoon (noon–5 PM)12
- Evening (5 PM and after)20
- Asynchronous / TBA12
Start dates
Sections begin on 4 distinct dates. 59 late-start more than two weeks after the term's earliest start.
Instructor diversity
Taught by 9 distinct instructors across 5 colleges.
Degree requirements by college
Expand a college to see the courses required for graduation. Data sourced from each college's official catalog.
Mohave Community College4 programs
Yavapai College4 programs
Common Welding Technology courses
- WLD 103Welding Safety/ Indust Term(6 sections)
- WLD 107Intro Weld Processes(5 sections)
- WLD 108Introduction to Pipe Welding(4 sections)
- WLD 104Intro Therm & Mech Cutting(4 sections)
- WLD 123Structural Steel 1(3 sections)
- WLD 133Structural Steel 2(3 sections)
- WLD 141Basic Pipe Welding(3 sections)
- WLD 143Intermediate Pipe Welding(3 sections)
- WLD 170Production I(3 sections)
- WLD 171Production II(3 sections)
- WLD 210Structural Steel 3(3 sections)
- WLD 212Structural Steel Capstone(3 sections)
Career outlook for Welding Technology graduates
Federal Bureau of Labor Statistics wage data for the primary career outcome of this program (2024 OEWS release). Compare Arizona’s typical pay to the national picture before choosing where to study.
Wage data reflects all workers in the occupation, not just recent CC graduates — entry-level pay is typically lower. Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics OEWS.
Frequently asked questions
- How long does a welding program take at a community college?
- One-year diploma programs cover the AWS Certified Welder fundamentals (SMAW + GMAW for structural steel). Two-year AAS programs add advanced processes (TIG, pipe welding), blueprint reading, materials science, and supervisory coursework. Many students start with the diploma, get hired, then return for the AAS while working.
- What welding certifications can I earn?
- AWS Certified Welder is the baseline credential — most Arizona programs prepare graduates to test for it on multiple processes (SMAW, GMAW, GTAW, FCAW) in multiple positions (flat, horizontal, vertical, overhead). Specialty certs (6G pipe, structural code D1.1, pressure-vessel code D1.5) come from employer-sponsored testing after hire and pay significantly more.
- What's the demand for welders in Arizona?
- Strong. Industrial manufacturing, pipeline maintenance, shipyard work, and infrastructure construction all need welders, and the workforce is aging faster than it's being replaced. BLS projects 2% growth nationally through 2032, but starting wages have risen 15-20% in the last five years as employers compete for trained welders.
- Do I need a four-year degree to advance in welding?
- No. Career progression goes: certified welder → senior welder → welding inspector (CWI certification, employer-paid) → welding supervisor → welding engineer. The CWI is the credential that opens supervisory and inspection roles at $25–35/hr+; the welding-engineer path requires more formal education but is the exception, not the norm. Most welders advance via certification stacking, not college credit.
Compare Welding Technology programs in other states
Same comparison view, different state systems. Useful if you’re considering an out-of-state community college or just want to see how Arizona’s welding technology programs stack up.
Other programs in Arizona
Some programs may not be offered at every college — pages render only when the program meets a coverage threshold for the state.