A medical laboratory technician (MLT) performs diagnostic tests on biological samples — blood, urine, tissue, and other bodily fluids — to help physicians diagnose and treat disease. You won't often see them during a patient visit, but their work is behind nearly every diagnostic decision a doctor makes.
When your doctor orders bloodwork and you get results back the same day — that's an MLT (or a related professional) running the analysis. When a cancer diagnosis depends on a tissue sample, an MLT is part of the chain that makes that result possible.
The role sits between a medical laboratory assistant (who handles sample collection and basic prep) and a medical laboratory scientist/technologist (MLS/MT), who performs more complex analysis and supervises. MLTs do the core bench work: running the actual tests.
The day-to-day work of a medical laboratory technician varies by department and setting, but certain duties are nearly universal:
This distinction matters when you're researching the career — and it matters for salary expectations and advancement:
Medical Laboratory Technician (MLT): Associate's degree (2 years), performs routine and moderately complex testing, works under the supervision of an MLS or laboratory manager. This is the entry point for most lab careers.
Medical Laboratory Scientist / Medical Technologist (MLS/MT): Bachelor's degree (4 years), performs complex testing including specialized assays, interprets results in more complex cases, may supervise MLTs, and can move into management or research roles.
The practical reality: MLTs and MLSs often work side by side on the same equipment. The regulatory difference — under CLIA (Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments) — is that certain "high complexity" tests require an MLS or physician director oversight. MLTs handle "moderate complexity" testing independently.
Hospital clinical laboratories are the most common setting — about 50% of MLTs work in hospitals. But the field is broader than that:
Becoming an MLT requires completing an accredited associate's degree program — typically a 2-year program offered at community colleges and technical schools. Programs must be accredited by NAACLS (National Accrediting Agency for Clinical Laboratory Sciences).
The curriculum covers clinical chemistry, hematology, microbiology, immunology, blood banking, and urinalysis. Most programs include a clinical practicum — supervised hands-on training in a real laboratory setting.
After graduating, most employers require medical laboratory technician certification. The two main certifying bodies:
The ASCP MLT exam covers seven content areas: blood banking, chemistry, hematology, immunology, laboratory operations, microbiology, and urinalysis. Passing requires thorough preparation — this isn't a test you can approach casually. Practice exams and content review are essential.
Salary varies by setting, experience, and geography. National averages put MLT salaries around $50,000–$60,000 annually, but the range is wide:
Geographic variation is significant. MLTs in California, New York, Washington state, and Alaska typically earn more than national averages. Rural markets often pay less but may offer signing bonuses to recruit.
The MLT credential is a launchpad. Many MLTs advance within the field or use it as a foundation for further education:
Specialization: Earning specialty certifications in blood banking (SBB), microbiology (M), or chemistry (C) through ASCP increases earning potential and expertise.
MLS/MT bridge programs: Many community colleges and universities offer online bridge programs for MLTs pursuing a bachelor's degree and MLS credential. This is the most common advancement path.
Supervision and management: With experience and additional credentials, lab supervisor, lead technician, and laboratory manager roles become available.
Education and training: Clinical laboratory science instructors are in demand; teaching in accredited programs is a path for experienced MLTs.