Browse current operator mining jobs in Victoria. Find operator roles at mining operations across the state and apply online.
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Mining operators work across surface and underground operations controlling heavy earthmoving equipment. Surface operators run excavators, dozers, graders, loaders and water carts on open pit mines and construction projects. Underground operators handle boggers (LHDs), underground trucks and other specialised machinery. Haul truck operators move ore and waste in trucks ranging from 100 to 400 tonnes.
Entry into mining operator roles varies by equipment type. Some positions accept operators with civil construction experience, while others require prior mining experience. Tickets from a Registered Training Organisation (RTO) for the specific equipment type are essential. Many operators start on smaller equipment and work up to larger machines like 200+ tonne excavators and large haul trucks.
Mining operator pay rises with experience and the size and complexity of the equipment. Haul truck operators sit at the entry end, while excavator operators on production machines and underground bogger operators in the Goldfields earn toward the top. Pay also varies by roster, commodity and whether the role is FIFO or residential.
Victoria's mining industry is smaller than the resource-state majors but includes the Stawell, Costerfield and Fosterville gold mines, mineral sands operations in the Murray Basin, and the legacy Latrobe Valley brown coal operations. Engineering, processing and corporate roles based in Melbourne support mining and minerals companies operating interstate and overseas.
A mining operator controls heavy earthmoving equipment such as excavators, dozers, graders, loaders and haul trucks. They move ore and waste material, maintain roads and benches, and support production targets on mine sites.
Mining operator pay depends on equipment type, experience and location. Excavator operators on large production machines and underground bogger operators are at the higher end, while haul truck operators are a common entry point.
You need equipment-specific tickets from a Registered Training Organisation and a Standard 11 (or state equivalent) mining induction. Specific ticket requirements vary by equipment type — excavator, front end loader, dozer, grader, and haul truck each have separate competencies.
Yes, but most entry level operator roles require at least equipment tickets from an RTO. Some employers accept operators with civil construction experience. Starting on smaller equipment or as a haul truck operator is a common pathway into mining.