How Police Officers in Arizona get paid in 2026 — median, range, experience tiers, metro breakdown, and a comparison against national pay.
Pay tiers reflect typical Arizona compensation across career stages. Specialized employers may pay above these ranges.
| Experience | Median 2026 | 25th % | 75th % |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry (0–1 yr) | $57,300 | $43,600 | $74,500 |
| Junior (2–4 yrs) | $71,200 | $54,200 | $92,600 |
| Mid-Level (5–9 yrs) | $81,900 | $62,300 | $106,500 |
| Senior (10–14 yrs) | $98,200 | $74,700 | $127,800 |
| Veteran (15+ yrs) | $111,300 | $84,700 | $144,800 |
Pay varies sharply within Arizona. Major metros usually outpay state-wide averages.
| Metro | Median | 25th % | 75th % | vs Arizona |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phoenix | $83,900 | $63,700 | $109,000 | +2% |
Top occupations by median pay in Arizona — useful context if you're weighing a career switch.
If you'd consider relocating, here's how regional and comparable markets pay for the same job.
The average Police Officer salary in Arizona is $81,900 per year as of 2026, based on projections from BLS Occupational Employment Statistics. The 25th percentile sits at $62,300 and the 75th at $106,500.
Pay-wise, Arizona sits +1% above the national Police Officer median ($81,100). Pay tracks roughly with the national average — cost of living is the deciding factor for take-home purchasing power.
Senior Police Officers (10–14 years of experience) in Arizona earn around $98,200 per year on average. Veterans with 15+ years can reach $111,300 or more, especially at the 75th percentile and above.
Among all 51 jurisdictions (50 states + DC), Arizona ranks 24th for Police Officer pay. The highest-paying state pays around $125,700 on average.
The median is a benchmark, not a verdict. Your exact market value depends on your experience and education — plus your specific employer's pay band. Run the free calculator for a personalized number.
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