Careers, Salaries and How to Break In
The Port of Houston ranked first in the US for foreign waterborne tonnage in 2024, handling a record 53 million short tons through its public terminals and processing 74% of all US Gulf Coast container traffic. For professionals across offshore and maritime engineering, vessel operations, port logistics, and marine services, Houston is one of the most active job markets in North America.
Why Houston Leads the US Maritime Market
The Houston Ship Channel – a 50-mile network of over 200 private and eight public terminals – supports 1.54 million jobs in Texas and generates $439 billion in state economic activity annually, according to Port Houston’s statistics. Container volumes rose 8% in 2024 to a record 4.14 million TEUs, and the port is actively expanding capacity to accommodate 15,000-17,000 TEU neo-Panamax vessels.
As the US’s top exporting metropolitan area ($180.9 billion in goods in 2024) and the center of Gulf of Mexico offshore operations, Houston combines conventional port trade with energy export flows – creating demand for a particularly broad range of maritime professionals.
Key Maritime Roles in Houston
Offshore and marine engineering
Houston is the headquarters of the US Gulf of Mexico offshore industry. Marine engineers, naval architects, subsea engineers, and offshore structural engineers support Deepwater operations from bases along the Energy Corridor. See WRS’s offshore recruitment capability.
- Marine engineers: propulsion, electrical, and mechanical systems on vessels and offshore facilities
- Naval architects: vessel design, stability analysis, and structural engineering
- Subsea engineers: flowline, umbilical, and production system design and installation support
- Offshore project engineers and managers: capital project and vessel campaign delivery
Deck and navigation
Vessel officers, captains, dynamic positioning operators, and seafarers crew the range of commercial and offshore vessels operating through the Gulf – from platform supply vessels and installation ships to tankers and container vessels transiting the Ship Channel.
- Masters and deck officers: navigation, vessel command, and cargo management
- Dynamic Positioning Officers (DPO): DP system operation on offshore support and construction vessels
- Able Seafarers and bosuns: deck operations, watchkeeping, and crew supervision
Port, terminal, and logistics
Port Houston’s terminals and the broader Ship Channel complex employ significant numbers of professionals in cargo handling, terminal management, freight forwarding, customs, and supply chain coordination.
- Terminal managers, port superintendents, and cargo planners
- Freight forwarders, shipping agents, and customs brokers
- Logistics coordinators and supply chain managers with maritime specialization
- Marine surveyors, marine warranty surveyors, and loss adjusters
Health, safety, and environment
Gulf of Mexico offshore operations and commercial port facilities both operate under stringent regulatory requirements – BSEE, USCG, and IMO oversight creates consistent demand for HSE professionals with maritime-specific credentials.
Salary Benchmarks
The following figures are drawn from US Bureau of Labor Statistics May 2024 data and are nationally representative. Houston salaries broadly track national benchmarks, with offshore rotational roles carrying a premium above shore-based equivalents.
| Role / Discipline | BLS Median (May 2024) | 10th-90th Percentile | Source |
| Marine Engineers and Naval Architects | $105,670 | $79,700 – $167,660 | BLS OOH |
| Water Transportation Workers (officers, captains, ratings) | $66,490 | $36,960 – $139,270 | BLS OOH |
| Electrical / Mechanical Engineers (offshore) | $118,780 (electrical engineers median) | $79,000 – $167,000+ | BLS OOH |
| Logisticians (freight, supply chain) | $79,400 | $50,800 – $121,600 | BLS OOH |
Essential Certifications
- STCW Basic Safety Training: Mandatory baseline for all seafarers on commercial vessels internationally.
- USCG Merchant Mariner Credential: Required for officers and most ratings on US-flagged vessels. Issued by the US Coast Guard and specific to vessel type and license level.
- Dynamic Positioning (Nautical Institute): Standard requirement for DPO roles on offshore support and construction vessels.
- BOSIET / HUET: Required for all personnel working on Gulf of Mexico offshore platforms and production facilities.
- TWIC (Transportation Worker Identification Credential): Required for unescorted access to US port facilities. Essential for anyone working at Port Houston terminals.
- PE License: Required or strongly preferred for marine engineers in engineering-of-record roles.
Certification bodies: USCG Merchant Mariner Credentials | Nautical Institute DP Certification | TSA TWIC Programme
Market Outlook
The BLS projects 6% employment growth for marine engineers and naval architects between 2024 and 2034, with offshore energy – including offshore wind – cited as a key driver. Port Houston’s ongoing expansion, sustained Gulf of Mexico drilling activity, and a record 680% increase in wind power equipment passing through the port in 2024 all underpin continued demand across all maritime disciplines.
Find Maritime Jobs in Houston with WRS
WRS connects maritime and offshore professionals with leading employers across Houston, the Gulf of Mexico, and globally – across engineering, vessel operations, subsea, and logistics disciplines. Explore our current maritime job opportunities or submit your CV to register.