Medium AI Risk Average

Farm labor contractors

SOC Code: 13-1074

Farm labor contractors carries a 26% AI exposure score (Medium automation risk), with a median annual wage of $48,690 and +6.0% projected employment growth from 2024 to 2034 (BLS), affecting approximately 3,900 workers. Full task breakdown, skills, and employer data are below.

AI Exposure Score
26% Medium

Proportion of tasks susceptible to AI automation (O*NET analysis)

Projected Growth
+6.0%
2024–2034 (BLS)
+200 jobs
Median Annual Wage
$48,690
BLS May 2024
How wage figures are sourced →

AI Exposure vs Industry Growth

Workforce demand by occupation Sanctioned bespoke signature viz (@signature-viz, KIZ-799) showing occupation-level workforce demand from BLS OEWS data. Pure SVG, no external dependencies.Projected Growth 2024-2034 (BLS)Technology+12.8%Healthcare+10.2%Professional+7.8%Education+5.8%Construction+4.5%Finance+4.6%Logistics+3.2%Government+1.2%Manufacturing-2.1%Retail-3.4%
National AI Exposure
40%
Average across all occupations
Avg Wage Growth
+3.2%
Median annual wage change
High-Risk Roles
127
Occupations with >70% AI exposure

Total occupations tracked

832

Covering all SOC major groups

Data currency

2024

BLS Employment Projections

AI exposure avg

40%

Fleet-wide median across all roles

Methodology confidence 92.0%
Industry standard

Composite score weighing O*NET task data completeness, BLS projection methodology, and cross-validation with employer risk grades.

Employment Projections

3,900
Employment 2024
4,200
Projected 2034
+6.0%
Change (%)
+200
Change (jobs)

Occupation Insight

Farm labor contractors (SOC 13-1074) carries an AI exposure score of 26%, placing it in the Medium automation-risk tier. This score is computed from O*NET Database 30.0 task-level analysis, where each task an occupation performs is evaluated against current generative AI, robotic process automation, and machine-learning capabilities. A score below 40% reflects tasks anchored in physical dexterity, unstructured environments, or high-touch human interaction that current AI cannot reliably replicate.

The economic context matters alongside the risk score. BLS counted approximately 3,900 workers in this occupation in 2024, and projects a +6.0% change through 2034 — modest growth that keeps the occupation viable even as tasks evolve. Median annual compensation stands at $48,690, reflecting both skill scarcity and the value employers place on the tasks that remain difficult to automate. Entry typically requires No formal educational credential, plus Less than 5 years of related experience.

For career planners, this profile should be read alongside the task, skill, and knowledge breakdowns below and the list of employers whose workforce composition includes Farm labor contractors. Adjacent occupations shown further down offer lateral moves that preserve industry knowledge while potentially reducing exposure. Pair the AI exposure score with the BLS employment projection and wage percentiles above for a complete career assessment.

Education & Entry Requirements

Typical Education
No formal educational credential
Work Experience
Less than 5 years
On-the-Job Training
Short-term on-the-job training

Top Tasks (O*NET)

  1. 1. Pay wages of contracted farm laborers.
  2. 2. Provide food, drinking water, and field sanitation facilities to contracted workers.
  3. 3. Recruit and hire agricultural workers.
  4. 4. Direct and transport workers to appropriate work sites.
  5. 5. Employ foremen to deal directly with workers when recruiting, hiring, instructing, assigning tasks, and enforcing work rules.
  6. 6. Supervise the work of contracted employees.
  7. 7. Furnish tools for employee use.

Key Skills Required

  • Speaking
  • Active Listening
  • Management of Personnel Resources
  • Time Management
  • Critical Thinking
  • Social Perceptiveness
  • Coordination
  • Judgment and Decision Making
  • Reading Comprehension
  • Writing

Knowledge Areas

  • Foreign Language
  • Food Production
  • Mathematics
  • Personnel and Human Resources
  • Production and Processing
  • Law and Government
  • Customer and Personal Service
  • Administration and Management
  • English Language
  • Public Safety and Security

Frequently Asked Questions

Will AI replace Farm labor contractors?

Farm labor contractors has an AI exposure score of 26%, indicating a medium level of automation risk. The majority of tasks in this role require human judgment, creativity, or physical presence that AI cannot easily replicate.

What is the job outlook for Farm labor contractors?

According to BLS Employment Projections 2024-2034, Farm labor contractors is projected to grow by 6.0% over the decade. Current employment stands at approximately 3,900 workers.

What skills are needed for Farm labor contractors?

Key skills for Farm labor contractors include Speaking, Active Listening, Management of Personnel Resources, and others. Typical entry-level education is No formal educational credential.

How much do Farm labor contractors earn?

The median annual wage for Farm labor contractors is $48,690, according to BLS Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics (May 2024). Actual earnings vary by location, experience, industry, and employer. The BLS publishes detailed wage percentiles by region in its Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program.

What education is required for Farm labor contractors?

The typical entry-level education for Farm labor contractors is No formal educational credential. Employers generally expect Less than 5 years of related work experience. On-the-job training typically involves Short-term on-the-job training. Requirements can vary by employer and specialization.

Which companies employ Farm labor contractors?

Farm labor contractors roles exist across many industries and employers. Workforce composition is estimated from BLS industry-occupation employment distributions matched to SEC-registered public companies.

AI Exposure Rating

1.3
out of 5.0

Medium automation risk based on 7 analyzed tasks. Most tasks require human judgment and are resistant to automation.

Data sources: Bureau of Labor Statistics Employment Projections 2024–2034 and O*NET Database 30.0. Employment figures are rounded. Wage data from BLS Occupational Employment Statistics (OES).

Related

Data sourced from official public datasets. See our methodology for details. Retrieved and formatted by PlainWorkforce Editorial