Explore jobs
Find specific jobs
Explore careers
Explore professions
Best companies
Explore companies
Avg. Salary $33,414
Avg. Salary $59,228
Growth rate -3%
Growth rate 0.3%
American Indian and Alaska Native 1.01%
Asian 8.64%
Black or African American 8.59%
Hispanic or Latino 18.38%
Unknown 4.86%
White 58.52%
Genderfemale 33.90%
male 66.10%
Age - 46American Indian and Alaska Native 3.00%
Asian 7.00%
Black or African American 14.00%
Hispanic or Latino 19.00%
White 57.00%
Genderfemale 47.00%
male 53.00%
Age - 46Stress level is high
7.1 - high
Complexity level is intermediate
7 - challenging
Work life balance is fair
6.4 - fair
| Skills | Percentages |
|---|---|
| Calipers | 54.10% |
| MES | 10.67% |
| MRB | 10.39% |
| Customer Specifications | 7.66% |
| Engineering Drawings | 5.84% |
When your background is strong enough, you can start writing your final assembly inspector resume.
You can use Zippia's AI resume builder to make the resume writing process easier while also making sure that you include key information that hiring managers expect to see on a final assembly inspector resume. You'll find resume tips and examples of skills, responsibilities, and summaries, all provided by Zippi, your career sidekick.
Now it's time to start searching for a final assembly inspector job. Consider the tips below for a successful job search:

Are you a final assembly inspector?
Share your story for a free salary report.
The average final assembly inspector salary in the United States is $33,414 per year or $16 per hour. Final assembly inspector salaries range between $21,000 and $51,000 per year.
What am I worth?
People who object to getting things right the first time and try to slip slop past me.
Making sure that what goes out reflects my commitment to top quality.
Working for myself. Freedom
People trying to low ball me on pricing and trying to get me to do more than 1 inspection for the price of one inspection
In a lot of places, a QA Inspector tends to be a dead-end job at that particular company because it is difficult to find people willing to stay in that position long term (most leave within 2 years). However, it is a valuable stepping stone to gaining a promotion in a new company! Also, the job itself is thankless. Production dislikes QA, management never likes to receive bad news...it is a job where you never get thanked for preventing bigger errors, only punished if you end up missing anything. I takes a hardy person who likes working independently to perform well in this role.