HomeOhio › Automotive Technology apprenticeships

Automotive Technology Apprenticeships in Ohio

7 registered apprenticeship programs in Ohio train automotive technology apprentices. Registered apprenticeships (U.S. Dept of Labor) pay wages from day one — training costs are typically covered by the sponsor instead of tuition. Most run 2–5 years to full journey-level pay, and you apply directly to the sponsor. Licensing note: registered automotive-technician apprenticeships operate in Ohio via apprenticeship.gov/ApprenticeOhio; with no license requirement, paid on-the-job training fully substitutes for schooling.

Automotive Technology apprenticeship alerts for Ohio

Sponsor application windows open unpredictably and close fast. Get an email when new sponsors register or windows open in your state.

We may share your info with matched school and program partners so they can contact you about enrollment. Unsubscribe anytime. See our privacy & editorial policy.

Registered programs by city

Freemont (1)

SponsorProgram type
Vanguard-Sentinel Career & Technology CenterMultiple Employer

Athens (1)

SponsorProgram type
AREA 14 WORKFORCE DEVELOPMENT BOARDMultiple Employer

Medina (1)

SponsorProgram type
Medina County Career CenterMultiple Employer

Parma (1)

SponsorProgram type
GENERAL MOTORS - PARMASingle Employer

Oberlin (1)

SponsorProgram type
OBERLIN COLLEGESingle Employer

Toledo (1)

SponsorProgram type
General Motors Powertrain Toledo Transmission OperationsSingle Employer

Defiance (1)

SponsorProgram type
General Motors Powertrain Defiance, OH FoundrySingle Employer

To apply: contact sponsors through apprenticeship.gov or the sponsor's own site. Prefer classroom-first? Compare the 29 automotive technology schools in Ohio.

Sponsor data: U.S. Dept of Labor Registered Apprenticeship (apprenticeship.gov), refreshed quarterly; locations reflect DOL registration records. Duplicate registrations and corrections-facility programs are filtered from display. Independent site — not affiliated with the U.S. DOL. About half of states run their own apprenticeship agencies (incl. NY, MN, OR, VT, WA, DC) — federal data undercounts those states, so a low count there does not mean apprenticeships don't exist.