I think the granularity of this map is far too coarse grained. Forks, WA and Seattle are in the same bucket. Same with San Jose, sharing the same bucket as Ukiah. The "Greater Portland Area" stretches all the way to the southern border of Oregon.
That said, there's still some surprising results. I would have expected NYC to be on par with Western Washington and the Bay Area, but it's significantly less, ~190K vs ~260K.
ryandrake 43 days ago [-]
Including Pike County, PA as part of the New York City area is kind of wild, too, from someone who grew up there. If you're making $190K and living in Pike County, you're living like a Sultan of a country with a palace made entirely of gold.
shmatt 42 days ago [-]
The pay is for the office location, not home location. And as a tech corp employee in NYC I have multiple coworkers commuting 2h each way 2-3 times a week (including from the Pike County area). Rural PA has become pretty popular for the 4br SFH for sub-$1M crowd
wbl 43 days ago [-]
Not all goods are nontradeable. Flights and lodging at a destination cost the same to everyone as do iPhones etc.
FredPret 42 days ago [-]
As an immigrant from the 3rd world -> Canada, I found a surprising number of things fit this bill.
Some things have a global market and everyone is paying ~ the same price everywhere.
- Meat, to an extent
- Any oil-derived product
- Electronics
- Software
- IP
- Cars
- Clothes
Of course there are always local taxes, regulations, and logistical considerations that skew the price this way or that way by 10-30%, but these markets can be pretty efficient.
jacurtis 42 days ago [-]
While I do agree with you, that doesn't really impact salary all too much. Allow me to explain.
Taxes, Housing, Transportation, and Insurance is what eats up most of your expenses anyway. Housing varies wildly across the world. Many parts of the US now cost > $3,000 /mo to rent a median home. Most of those homes are probably selling for ~$500k putting your mortgage at current interest rates in the same ballpark of $3k /mo. For somoene making $120k that is 1/3 of their income. For someone making the national average (around $70k) that is 1/2 their total income. Just to mention, those areas (Seattle, San Fran, NYC) where you see $250k-300k salaries, those people are paying much higher than these figures. Probably $5-6k in rent or buying modest homes that just happen to cost $1.25M-1.5M
In the US you also can pay $1,000 (or more) /mo for health insurance. Most other parts of the world don't have this expense.
As of 2024, the average price of a new car is now $47,000 in the USA. Now not everyone is buying a new car but the used car market swells based on this figure.
Then you pay 15-30% in taxes on average for most people here.
So You add all that up and probably 2/3-3/4 of your money is gone.
I agree with you that things like clothing, consumer goods, software, meat, and oil are largely comparable globally now, but these goods only account for probably 10-20% of a person's monthly expenses.
Not to mention retirement. Because all these costs are so high, it means I need to put a larger percent of my paycheck to retirement so I can survive a few years of not working before I die. When basics like healthcare and housing are as high as I outlined, it means more money needs to go to retirement, which is money that can't be spent on these basic goods that you mention.
So yes, these goods you call out are in fact comparable around the world. But they only account for a relatively small portion of someone's expenses. The outstanding expenses are the most variable (housing, transportation, insurance, taxes).
FredPret 42 days ago [-]
Before I moved from my very cheap birth country to the entirely-not-cheap area known as Toronto, I thought along these lines and was concerned that my standard of living would be the same or lower. However, surprisingly, I found it to go up a lot.
- Real Estate did take up a larger % of my budget, but it was nicer
- The globalized products are only a small % of the budget but they're relatively much cheaper so I can have more/better/both
Of course this doesn't mean expensive cities are perfect or even good. I later moved from Toronto to Alberta and it's night-and-day better. Of course the lifestyle is different and some might not like that.
There's a big qualitative angle so you can't really compare these things on a spreadsheet, but more after-tax dollars is almost always better.
stn8188 42 days ago [-]
This is true but the number of people who commute from Pike County (and the whole tri-state/NY-NJ-PA corner) down to the crowded parts of North Jersey and even NYC is insane. I live just across the river from Pike County and experience the traffic though our small town.
zuhayeer 43 days ago [-]
This is a great point, and something we plan to address. We currently use Nielsen's DMA (Designated Market Area) mappings within the US to separate out regional areas which was used for TV / media market surveys. We happen to use DMA categories for our regional pages on Levels.fyi which is why it was easiest to start with since we already had this data captured. The features can sometimes be a bit off and seem like they're grouped very far and wide (you'll notice there's a bit of Denver within Nevada and its just a vestige of how it used to be categorized), but it still provides a bit of a broader level grouping than something like zip code. We've also been considering using Combined Statistical Areas using population instead, but the benefit with DMAs is that it offers full coverage of the entire US whereas some major tech hubs are still missing from CSAs if relying solely on population.
We're planning to create some of our own regional definitions and borders using our own submissions and that should offer some more tighter bounds. This was just a v1, and I think its already resonating with folks.
> We've also been considering using Combined Statistical Areas using population instead, but the benefit with DMAs is that it offers full coverage of the entire US whereas some major tech hubs are still missing from CSAs if relying solely on population.
I think just using the 387 MSAs [1] instead of the 181 CSAs would get you far enough to cover all the major tech hubs.
If that data is submitted by individuals to a particular company, is it possible to see a lot more detailed heatmap, perhaps down to each address of each company?
teasp2 43 days ago [-]
Agreed, the "Greater Boston Area" doesn't really reflect the reality, you are mixing Boston Metro (HCOL) with many others in Mass, Vermont, and New Hampshire that can't be compared.
jdminhbg 43 days ago [-]
> The "Greater Portland Area" stretches all the way to the southern border of Oregon.
There may be an off-the-grid remote developer in Steens Mountain somewhere, but there aren't any employers there.
cvwright 42 days ago [-]
Lots of techies out in Bend though
davidw 42 days ago [-]
This is accurate, as a techie in Bend. But the map hives off Deschutes county all by itself, and at the same time lumps in Baker City with the "Greater Portland Area". That needs some work.
0xB31B1B 42 days ago [-]
Not nearly as many as there are in portland by a factor of about 25
Mountain_Skies 43 days ago [-]
Given how many areas are marked as not having enough data, I'm going to guess that the dataset is pretty small, which is why some of the areas had to cover large spaces.
sn9 41 days ago [-]
You think that's shocking?
This is just pre-tax TC.
When you take into account taxes and cost of living, comparing NYC to a place like Austin makes NYC TCs look positively stingy.
apercu 42 days ago [-]
I found it interesting that Madison, WI is on par with Chicago, and pay is better than Milwaukee. Digging in a little it's because global tech companies have offices in Madison (also Epic, but even though I was in Toronto for 20 years and thus out of date, I never knew Epic to be a high paying company), and Milwaukee seems to be regionals (Uline & Kohls - and retail rarely pays top dollar for tech talent).
mgerdts 42 days ago [-]
I’ve commonly heard people referring to Epic as a company that pays quite well for the area. They also have a reputation for being kinda crappy to work for, so I never pursued a position there. All the other jobs and offers I’ve had in the Madison area pay quite poorly compared to remote jobs with companies based in the Bay Area.
kridsdale3 37 days ago [-]
Are we talking Epic health software or Epic MegaGames?
mgerdts 36 days ago [-]
Epic Systems, the purveyor of medical records management software.
drdaeman 43 days ago [-]
Is it possible to exclude FAANGs and other large corporations? Mixing smaller companies and soul-draining leviathans all in the same pot does not produce meaningful results.
ponector 43 days ago [-]
Smaller companies are also soul-draining in many cases. Why to exclude only faangs? Let's exclude banks, insurance etc
ken47 43 days ago [-]
You're getting caught up on "soul-draining," but FAANG's and adjacent are generally acknowledged to have the highest TC. It would be useful to know what the statistics are with these outlier companies removed.
jeffbee 42 days ago [-]
The "outliers" employ a quarter million software engineers. You are asking for reality to be warped and censored to suit your weird vibes.
ken47 42 days ago [-]
No one called for reality to be censored - simply a toggle that shows the summary stats with and without outliers included. This is the kind of thing folks learn in Stats 101.
joshuamorton 42 days ago [-]
How are you defining "outlier"?
You can obviously exclude the top 25 percentile of salaries, since the app shows breakdowns by percentage, but I doubt levels.fyi has accurate data on the number of employees of each company in a particular region.
q7xvh97o2pDhNrh 42 days ago [-]
The "outliers" are the companies paying these insultingly low salaries for technology development. That's why there's so much low-quality software in the world.
FAANG (and a few FAANG-adjacent) companies are the only ones paying close to decent wages, and even they've been making frankly egregious cuts to their protein-bar budgets lately.
Let's not sit around manufacturing skewed datasets that give people the wrong idea about what software engineers should get paid.
ponector 42 days ago [-]
Not everyone who works on faang codebase receive a decent wage. Don't forget an army of cheap external contractors sold to faang by bodyshops.
romanhn 42 days ago [-]
While I agree that FAANG data should be present/available, I will say that the only reason those companies are able to pay such amounts are due to their outsized valuations and the market shares they have captured. Vast majority of companies do not bring in per-employee revenues on par with the FAANGs, so it's not realistic to set one's definition of "decent wages" at those numbers and expect everyone else to pay them. Lots of high-flying startups made a play for fast growth and paid similarly high comp, with the end result of laying huge numbers of people off when the market demanded accountability.
TL;DR: I love being an engineer in the Bay Area, but we truly are a bubble.
JasserInicide 42 days ago [-]
Why to exclude only faangs?
Because they skew the numbers upwards. Most of the market doesn't pay their wages.
42 days ago [-]
42 days ago [-]
shepherdjerred 42 days ago [-]
My job at a smaller company was much more soul sucking than my jobs at larger companies
42 days ago [-]
sn9 41 days ago [-]
The default view is for median TC which is resistant to outliers.
linguae 42 days ago [-]
Even in Silicon Valley, not all large employers pay FAANG rates. In general, older, “enterprisey” companies (think HP, IBM, Cisco, and Intel, to name a few) pay considerably less than FAANG and its peers, which tend to be younger and sell consumer-facing products and services.
bilsbie 42 days ago [-]
Folks if you’re at all senior don’t accept less than 200K. It’s the new 100K. And for the level of value you bring to the table you deserve at least a median house within commute distance of your job.
daok 42 days ago [-]
I'm over 15 years of experience, lost my job, and finding a job at 200k+ took months (Bay Area). I'm lucky and found something, but the market is totally different than it was 3-5 years ago. There is a lot of competition, and there are not a lot of open positions.
Swizec 42 days ago [-]
> I'm over 15 years of experience, lost my job, and finding a job at 200k+ took months (Bay Area)
Contrasting anecdata: I'm over 15 years of experience, started looking while employed, and got a 200k+ job in ~1 month. At an early stage startup in Bay Area. (this year)
I wonder what we did differently. My approach focused on why I'm a unique value prop to my target market following the "What have you achieved for what type of company/project" positioning statement formula.
johnnyanmac 42 days ago [-]
Too many factors to really compare. Domain, interview preparation, networks, plain ol' luck. You found a startup as well which is a different mentality than a traditional company.
In my comparison, games is still falling in real time and I've found nothing full time for almost a year. But I also randomly got cold called for some part time work that keeps me afloat.
jwells89 41 days ago [-]
Niche might make a difference too, with demand and supply levels varying between them. Don’t know what the current market is like but in the past my experience has been that niches with higher barriers to entry see significantly fewer applicants (and thus, less competition per position).
kridsdale3 37 days ago [-]
It also may come down to silly factors like how nice was your shirt, when you interviewed? We in nerd-world like to think candidates are objectively measurable without bias, but traditional wisdom about how to get a job will always apply. Did one candidate have a better haircut than the other?
shepherdjerred 42 days ago [-]
I had a similarly easy experience finding a job this year, though I can’t exactly figure out what makes me different from those who struggle
therealdrag0 41 days ago [-]
200 base or TC with paper money?
Swizec 41 days ago [-]
200+ base. The paper money is where it gets real interesting. Fingers crossed!
lolinder 42 days ago [-]
Important missing context for this assertion: Living where?
We're here looking at a heatmap of pay across the entire US, and in most of the US it like like refusing anything less than $200k would be insisting that you're in the 90th+ percentile of software engineers in your area, which is for obvious reasons not something everyone can get away with.
JoeOfTexas 42 days ago [-]
The job market for tech is saturated with all the layoffs. Not many companies are going to pay anywhere close to 200k anymore.
esalman 42 days ago [-]
That's my impression as well. Fancy CRUD jobs paying $200k simply does not exist anymore. It's more like 100k is the new 200k, judging by past 3-4 years.
candiddevmike 42 days ago [-]
Maybe parent is trying to push for solidarity.
azemetre 42 days ago [-]
I feel like $180k in base salary in Boston is very hard to achieve. Only FAANG companies seem to pay that amount.
irrational 42 days ago [-]
Doesn't that depend on where you live?
ramon156 41 days ago [-]
Well, welcome to the new 200k, which is 100k
wooque 42 days ago [-]
The map needs better coloring, as most of it is in shades of green that are hard to distinguish. Also "Not enough data" should not be colored as the lowest pay range.
Also why is Greater Denver Area in the middle of Nevada, and leaking in Wyoming?
And some numbers are wrong Missoula Area says $190k median, but linked page says $123k median
duskwuff 42 days ago [-]
> Also "Not enough data" should not be colored as the lowest pay range.
To a jobseeker, there's very little practical difference between "the pay for software engineering jobs here is extremely low" and "there are no software engineering jobs here".
> Also why is Greater Denver Area in the middle of Nevada...?
That's Eureka County. No idea why it's classified as "greater Denver area", but its total population is 1,855; it's basically a rounding error. I'd be surprised if more than one or two of them were software engineers, let alone were in this dataset.
mastazi 42 days ago [-]
> "there are no software engineering jobs here".
I doubt that's what "Not enough data" means.
Waterluvian 43 days ago [-]
With apologies: a choropleth map, not a heatmap. And the granularity is unfortunately quite too low, but I appreciate that sometimes your geodataset is limiting. But with that pedantry out of the way: it would be awesome to be able to normalize based on cost of living.
Not that it’s an excuse: I do find it kind of odd that I do the same job as another remote engineer and yet I’m paid a fraction? But to be fair I don’t have student loans and paid off my house in a few years, so cost of living, cost of education, etc. can reveal practical opportunity even if it enshrouds any definition of fairness.
daotoad 42 days ago [-]
Thanks for the pedantry re. choropleth vs heatmap.
I learned something today because of it.
lifeisstillgood 42 days ago [-]
So there is a thing I notice but don’t fully understand. A good example is looking at job positions here in the UK - in the London commuter belt. You can see upwards of 150ukp on offer, commonly 90k. For London based jobs. But often you see jobs out in the commuter belt at around the 45 level. So that’s a double or tripling of the salary for a on hours train journey
Now I think of this as being like football (soccer!) teams. There is the division four league where the players are professional but often need a second job just to stay afloat - and there is the ridiculous heights of premier leagues
Players in the top of the game are not that much better - look at the stats and it’s maybe 10% more pass completion or shots on goal.
But the real issue is the teams - if a team is content in the fourth division, they don’t need to get a Saudi investor to bankroll millions so they can offer huge salaries.
They can offer low salaries knowing someone will turn up and only be 90% of the top rated ones.
I am not sure I understand why power laws work the way they do, a law firm needs hundreds of A players to service each client, a TV studio or football team only needs a handful because everyone watches the same show.
Is every business a SaaS business? Or are there businesses that can get 90% of the talent for 10% of the cost and make it work?
mastazi 43 days ago [-]
The "Not Enough Data" should really be a different color, instead it is very close to the lowest bracket which makes it confusing
binary132 42 days ago [-]
It’s very icky to me to think about median pay for the everyday American contrasted with what tech folks are pulling down. We’re not brain surgeons, people. Most people do not have good access to paying work, and expecting them to “learn to code” is literally a sad joke. I’m not cool with this situation just because I’m a part of it. Not clear that there’s much we can do; people just aren’t offering any other meaningful alternatives outside of radically overturning our entire social model, which I suppose it might come to eventually, and probably for the worse for everyone involved.
vunderba 42 days ago [-]
Couple notes:
1. There's a HUGE difference in skill sets between software engineers. Some of us have deep understandings of algorithms, linear algebra, and CS theory, and others know how to style a button with appropriate margins. I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to decide which of these is more difficult.
2. Inequity exists everywhere, and neurotic self-guilt doesn't really accomplish anything. The bottom line is we're all brought into this world with differing advantages/disadvantages across both nature and nurture.
Rather than bemoaning the inherent nature of a free market on a random news board, you'd be better off searching for methods of active altruism, donating to auditable charities (Charity Navigator and GiveWell come to mind), and actively helping those in need.
kridsdale3 37 days ago [-]
> Some of us have deep understandings of algorithms, linear algebra, and CS theory, and others know how to style a button with appropriate margins. I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to decide which of these is more difficult.
I have the former, but 95% of the value I bring to FAANG is the latter.
My job lately is to double the revenue of various products that were built by a thousand deep algorithm workers but got no attention in the attention economy, by identifying and improving which button color (eg) would direct the traffic.
My simple work gets all the money directed to the company, but was far easier than the hard work of making The Thing. Because algorithm nerds often have no idea what is appealing or valuable to human customers.
binary132 42 days ago [-]
The fact is that our pseudo-liberal market is extremely dysfunctional and doesn’t offer meaningful opportunity to most people who didn’t get technical degrees. A healthy society cannot run on pure software engineering, and cannot offer meaningful work only to its brightest nerds and most unscrupulous thieves. It’s good and right to notice this, and the solution is not that the nerds and thieves should consider dribbling a few extra scraps to the poors (at this point, everyone else).
No, I don’t think knowing how to perform an affine transform justifies a 20x better salary than the common man has access to. The vast majority of folks in tech are not building rocket ships and flying cities.
SpicyLemonZest 42 days ago [-]
Software engineers don't recieve a 20x better salary than the common man has access to. The heatmap indicates that the median software engineer tends to make 2-3x the local median income.
xenadu02 41 days ago [-]
We might as well be brain surgeons.
Software is everywhere. It manages life and safety critical things for millions (billions?) of people every day. So much of everything that goes on at every level is affected by software. Software is also unique in that one engineer's work output can be sold, at near zero cost, to a billion people in theory. That isn't actually true but you get the idea.
Software Engineer is just a new professional class. Its value proposition is high and it turns out a relatively small number of people have the mental model and aptitude to be really good at it.
kridsdale3 37 days ago [-]
We also benefit enormously from the marginal cost of delivering product to the next customer being zero. Our output scales to the whole global population (almost) for free. To a brain surgeon, addressing 2 patients instead of 1 costs 1 additional brain surgeon.
qwerpy 42 days ago [-]
I’m thankful that I happened to end up in this field but I’m not going to feel guilty about it. It is hard work and stressful, and if someone’s going to be “lucky” that they chose the right field why can’t it be me?
binary132 42 days ago [-]
Guilty is not what I was looking for here although clearly that is what people picked up. I certainly don’t think I bear any responsibility for the present situation, even though I benefit from it. To notice that the situation is quite bad for most people and very good for us is not something that should induce guilt but rather, I think, shame and anger.
lovecg 42 days ago [-]
This sort of pearl clutching among highly paid professionals seems to be unique to software engineers. Lawyers and finance types meanwhile are just laughing all the way to the bank.
piuantiderp 42 days ago [-]
They are the most inclined to think they can avoid politics. The other types just deal with it every day
binary132 42 days ago [-]
and we should be more like them, is the thinking?
lovecg 42 days ago [-]
Instead of attempting to lower the compensation of the field as a whole (which, by the way, the actual capitalist employers will love), you’re welcome to donate half of your salary as you see fit.
binary132 42 days ago [-]
Where did you get “we should make less” from what I said? I want more people to have opportunities that don’t suck.
jmward01 43 days ago [-]
This is great. I will say though that, unsurprisingly, Puerto Rico isn't part of the dataset. Sites like this could really help make the point to people that the US is bigger than the 50 states.
[edit] Alaska and Hawaii aren't on here either so it should have been 'bigger than the continuous 48 states'.
jonny_eh 43 days ago [-]
Including other countries like Canada, UK, France, and Germany would certainly be nice.
darkwizard42 43 days ago [-]
Helpful tip, the word you are looking for is "contiguous" when describing the US states all connected together. Can also use the Lower 48
jmward01 42 days ago [-]
I have no idea why I typed that but I will accept the public shame!
darkwizard42 42 days ago [-]
No shame intended! Just helping in case you didn't know!
dinobones 42 days ago [-]
Can levels.fyi stop showing non-liquid pre-IPO startup equity as part of total comp please?
You'd be surprised at how difficult it is to get liquidity for that stuff, often there are limits to the amount you can liquidate, some can't sell on private marketplace, some can only sell every once in a blue moon event, etc. This is all without mentioning that the "valuation" itself is typically pretty speculative.
Levels.fyi is treating this equity the same as public company RSUs, which is not the same at all.
zuhayeer 42 days ago [-]
How do you think it should be treated? I think at the individual granular data point level adding a tag or note about the equity not being immediately liquid is a good start. But I don't think it'd be a good idea to weigh the stock differently since that can depend on so many things. For example SpaceX and some other private companies do offer regular liquidity and I would consider their equity close to liquid.
Appreciate the feedback though, and definitely agree we can work on how we display the data and make it more clear.
fogleman 42 days ago [-]
Add another dropdown so we can color code by Base salary only, Stock only, etc.
neilv 42 days ago [-]
Maybe 3 categories?
1. Salary (straightforward, on regular schedule, and you'll get it)
2. Bonuses and RSUs (various vesting rules, and ways you can never see it)
3. Startup stock and (worse) stock options (probably worthless, vesting rules, and you might need an advisor to make sure you don't exercise and come out with a big negative)
zuhayeer 42 days ago [-]
Yeah that make sense, will work on adding for this heatmap
joshdavham 42 days ago [-]
This was really cool to look at!
But I still don't understand how non-tech people afford to live in SF. Wouldn't they be priced out?
linguae 42 days ago [-]
There are ways people without FAANG-level salaries are able to afford San Francisco:
1. Purchasing when market prices were lower, or inheriting a home. San Francisco has been expensive for decades, but it didn’t always require FAANG-level salaries to afford purchasing a home there.
2. Living in a rent-controlled unit and avoiding evictions (e.g., if the landlord wants to sell, move in, or redevelop the unit).
3. Qualifying for government-subsidized housing, in the form of either Section 8 (voucher-based housing assistance), below market rate rentals, or below market rate properties for purchase. Many Bay Area municipalities have a local housing authority that provides more information about local subsidized housing programs.
4. Shared living situations, whether it’s with family, friends, or strangers, helps reduce housing costs at the expense of needing to share space with others. I know many people in the Bay Area who wouldn’t be able to afford to live here without some type of shared accommodations.
5. Some employers subsidize housing expenses. For example, some universities in the Bay Area offer housing assistance to tenure-track faculty members, ranging from down payment assistance to zero-interest mortgages. There are some universities that sell homes to faculty and staff at below-market prices, with the stipulation that those properties get sold to other faculty and staff once they are put up for sale.
ops 42 days ago [-]
6. Sell drugs
kridsdale3 37 days ago [-]
7. Sell themselves
pchristensen 42 days ago [-]
People who bought houses at any point in the last decades are house-rich and have a low tax basis thanks to Prop 13. Otherwise, there's an active, ongoing exodus of non-tech people, as well as increasing cost of living and longer commutes for people who stay.
joshdavham 42 days ago [-]
This actually sounds a lot like Vancouver in Canada.
Aeolun 42 days ago [-]
Someone needs to serve the burgers though. Are you saying those people commute two hours each way?
linguae 42 days ago [-]
Oh, definitely. One of the worst commutes in Northern California is the Altamont Pass, which Interstate 580 traverses. As early as 4:30am there is a long line of cars filled with commuters who live in more affordable Central Valley places like Stockton, Modesto, and Tracy, commuting to either Silicon Valley or San Francisco. These are generally not FAANG software engineers; they do all sorts of other work, such as cleaning offices, preparing food, stocking aisles, teaching students, building Teslas (Tesla has a shuttle that goes from Modesto to its Fremont factory), policing Bay Area communities, fighting fires, and a lot more.
robotresearcher 42 days ago [-]
The megacorps also have buses that run to distant towns. People have informal roommate situations midweek and ride the bus home for the WFH+weekend.
pchristensen 41 days ago [-]
Yes - check out Brentwood, Gilroy, etc where middle class Bay Area residents are commuting from. The expense and shortage of non-tech labor is also pushing things like ghost kitchens, coffee robots, self-checkout kiosks, etc.
ForHackernews 42 days ago [-]
Some people live in their cars during the week.
johnnyanmac 42 days ago [-]
The increasing homeless population says yes.
et-al 43 days ago [-]
This $263k median in the Bay Area is making me sad.
onewland 42 days ago [-]
I think it's certainly incorrect (having known lots of people on both sides of that number, there are far far more below). Another comment thread suggested that startup equity is being taken at face value, which might justify the number but is totally ridiculous
62951413 42 days ago [-]
On the other hand, most LinkedIn jobs published last week (e.g. full time/hybrid in SF) seem to be much closer to 180K-200K.
oceanplexian 42 days ago [-]
That’s base compensation. They aren’t reporting equity, which is usually at least 1/3 to 1/2 total compensation.
42 days ago [-]
Aeolun 42 days ago [-]
Omg, my employer is on the map xD
Guess there’s something to be said for being headquartered in Nashville.
It’s a bit sad the pay there seems to easily be twice what they pay in Japan :/
xyst 42 days ago [-]
I used to be in the 90th percentile in my area 2 years ago. Then AIv2 (rebranded as genAI, LLM) pumped with VC money via low interest pushed my TC to 70-75th percentile.
I could start chasing the $ again, but at this point I’m nearly financially independent and can almost just say fuck it.
notesinthefield 42 days ago [-]
I zoomed in on my home county and the surrounding ones multiple times and each time got a different result. It showed Franklin county in Columbus Ohio to be Indianapolis.
cheriot 43 days ago [-]
I'm surprised NYC is 190k vs Bay Area at 263k and Seattle at 240k. Maybe there's just more non-tech industry software jobs pulling down the median?
reducesuffering 43 days ago [-]
I believe it's the outsized proportion of FAANMG employees. Bay Area should be obvious but Seattle has gobs of $250k comp Amazon and Microsoft employees, much more than outposts in NYC.
ryandrake 43 days ago [-]
I wonder how skewed the underlying data is, too. Perhaps they're somehow overcounting people at the higher levels and undercounting people lower on the totem pole. The idea of $250K being a median across all levels -anywhere- is kind of astonishing if true. Yes, we all know a few people making $400K at Facebook who have a vacation home in Aspen and drive two Ferraris (they always tell HN how common it is), but is it really that many to drive the median so high?
jandrewrogers 42 days ago [-]
I know many SWEs at boring non-FAANG, non-unicorn companies that make around the medians shown here so it seems roughly representative, anecdotally. The competitiveness of the market for good engineers has forced every company to at least pretend to try to compete on compensation. It didn't used to be this way but it has really compressed wages upward because you simply won't be able to hire anyone vaguely qualified otherwise.
reducesuffering 42 days ago [-]
It’s a selection bias for people that are already interested in compensation and willing to divulge it. If you’re on the site, then it perfectly fits you. But it wouldn’t be representative of all software engineers from a census perspective.
romanhn 42 days ago [-]
This is the answer. Most people don't know about levels.fyi.
Leherenn 42 days ago [-]
No idea how it is in the US, but if you have a look at Zürich, Switzerland, something like 20% of the data points are from Google, maybe 50% from FAANG.
Clearly very heavily biased towards high-paying multinational companies.
jeffbee 42 days ago [-]
A person who only makes $400k TC at Meta won't even have a first home in the Bay Area, much less another one in Aspen.
reducesuffering 42 days ago [-]
Plenty of people with $400k TC at Meta have Bay Area homes. $400k TC doesn’t mean “I just got the job where’s my $2m house.” But over a career (Facebook is 20 years old) it does.
ac29 42 days ago [-]
The median home-owning household in the bay area doesnt make anywhere close to $400k/yr. Its expensive, but not that expensive.
jeffbee 42 days ago [-]
I don't think that's a good way to view it. How about the median home buying household? In my town the median sale price this year has been $1.6 million, considering interest rates and property taxes that amounts to $10k/mo housing costs, which is over half the take-home pay of a $400k gross income in California. This is not even to mention the fact that nobody will lend you a mortgage based on the equity portion of your TC, they will usually only count the salary portion and discount the equity portion.
aprilthird2021 42 days ago [-]
Napkin math:
$400k * 0.6 = $240k post tax
$240k - $36k rent = $204k
$204k - $50k annual expenses = $154k
So if you just work that job for 3-4 years you'll easily have a heavy down payment for a house, assuming no promo, no raises.
If you work the job for 7-8 years you can buy a house (more like a townhouse) all in cash. Not going to be the best house on the market, but it's doable.
This is all not considering investing in the stock market, raises, being frugal with your expenses, living with roommates to save up a bit, etc. there's lots of ways to parlay more money than most other people will ever make annually into a home
jeffbee 42 days ago [-]
Your belief in stationary housing prices is charming.
aprilthird2021 42 days ago [-]
Read the last part of my comment. I left out many natural ways one's earnings and investments and savings could increase over time also. The math still maths
webninja 42 days ago [-]
The next headline based on this map: “Areas with legalized marijuana are associated with higher software engineer pay.”
Mountain_Skies 43 days ago [-]
Surprised to see $155k as the median for Montgomery-Selma. It's a very low cost of living area, which in the tech industry is justification to pay low salaries regardless of the low desirability of the area. Going to guess it's mostly defense related developer jobs associated with Gunter.
aprilthird2021 42 days ago [-]
$155k in that part of Alabama gets you a real nice house, big lot, kids in private school, etc.
Cyclone_ 42 days ago [-]
I'm getting the sense there's a heavy sampling bias towards larger companies. I looked at my company which is on 1 metro area and it isn't super accurate. The titles they list don't even match up with what we call them.
Zaheer 42 days ago [-]
We're working on improving our taxonomy right now and would love some more detailed feedback. Do you mind emailing me at <my hn username> @levels.fyi?
kalyantm 42 days ago [-]
This is just depressing to look at from a European perspective....
jart 42 days ago [-]
Now you understand why my ancestors left your continent a very long time ago, and why you'll never leave.
thunder-blue-3 42 days ago [-]
for TC?
thirdacc 40 days ago [-]
Also depressing as a new grad applying to junior jobs that don't pay anywhere near these salaries, and not even hearing back for a prescreen.
42 days ago [-]
clvx 43 days ago [-]
Impressive Missoula, MT has a median higher than many metropolitan areas like Austin. One of the factors of the house market explosion in western MT.
In a related note, I was checking for tech meetups (at meetup.com) in Missoula and Bozeman and except for Montana programmers, there's no much there. There are a few slack communities but nothing specific for technologies or other groups.
bruckie 42 days ago [-]
I noticed Missoula as an outlier, too. Anyone have a good explanation?
My completely uninformed guess is that a bunch of highly-paid engineers moved there during the pandemic for some reason I don't understand, rather than anything inherent to the tech jobs market in Missoula. If so, why Missoula (vs., say, Jackson Hole)? And if not, is there another plausible explanation?
jandrewrogers 42 days ago [-]
Missoula has been low-profile fashionable with the tech crowd for a long time. It is basically a slightly smaller Boulder.
42 days ago [-]
cm2012 42 days ago [-]
Gas and oil industry
synergy20 42 days ago [-]
I'm surprised as well, google did not tell me much there about the high wage either, still have no clue
nick3443 43 days ago [-]
You in bozo too?
jabroni_salad 43 days ago [-]
It's interesting but I would also recommend checking out the BLS if you are interested in what other locations have to offer. It also has maps of where people are actually employed as well as the pay.
Southern CA was expected, but I chuckled at the containment zone that was Bakersfield. Sometimes reality is funnier than fiction.
teqsun 42 days ago [-]
The areas with the super high TCs seem to have a lower base % and higher stock %.
I'd like to know if the derived dollar values are the historic actualized or the current value. Because historically there was a real fortunate time to have your RSUs skyrocket, but now that things are stable/declining is the TC still that high?
42 days ago [-]
anon291 42 days ago [-]
Extremely sad that the 'greater Portland area' pays less than Missoula, but I'm sure my fellow Portlanders will make up some great excuse for it.
43 days ago [-]
freedomben 43 days ago [-]
Not really "across the US" because it's only the lower 48. AK, HI, US territories don't appear to be included. We're used to being forgotten so it's not a huge deal, but I figured I'd take this small opportunity to bitch about it :-D
If you're curious, SWE pay in AK is pretty low. I'd guess median in the 80k.
adamhartenz 43 days ago [-]
If I say I have been to McDonald's all across the country, that does not mean I have been to EVERY single McDonald's restaurant. Just various ones across the country
freedomben 43 days ago [-]
> If I say I have been to McDonald's all across the country, that does not mean I have been to EVERY single McDonald's restaurant. Just various ones across the country
Sure, but I would argue that you're speaking imprecisely then and using a cliche or phrase that isn't technically accurate at best, and is actually misleading at worst. And when requested for clarity, you should say, "well almost all." Either that or we have different definitions of what the word "all" means[1].
If someone said "I have been to all the states in the US" would you expect that they have been to AK and HI?
Yes. If someone said they had been to all the states I’d expect they had been to Alaska and Hawaii. On the other hand McDs all across the country I’d interpret as having been to a lot of McDs in different states with a wide geographical distribution.
moosedev 42 days ago [-]
Note the “all” in the example binds to “across”, not “McD’s”.
“All McD’s” - quite precise; literally all the McD’s.
“McD’s all across the country” - a much looser group, implies various McD’s spanning roughly coast to coast (hence “all across the country”), but not necessarily including the westernmost and easternmost McD’s - just a decent distribution of west-to-east, perhaps with no giant gaps (like missing the whole Midwest).
porridgeraisin 42 days ago [-]
You're only hurting yourself by looking up a dictionary for these sorts of things. Words have varying contextual meaning that can range from the dictionary definition to it's polar opposite. Just take the best possible interpretation and move on. Almost nobody cares about your "technically accurate".
al_borland 42 days ago [-]
Ann Arbor gets the call out over Detroit. That's rough... and the pay is higher in Traverse City? I'm so confused by these results.
justahuman74 43 days ago [-]
Are these numbers base salary or TC?
akavi 43 days ago [-]
Definitely TC
Mountain_Skies 43 days ago [-]
There's a breakdown of the compensation categories with each area.
zombiwoof 42 days ago [-]
So dumb to pay according to where you live.
Fun fact: VCs own lots of corp and residential real estate. They want to drive people to live in their areas, pay more but houses cost more and it’s just a big con
01100011 42 days ago [-]
It's not just VCs. Do you think your manager wants their home value to go down? They just paid $2.5 million for that 70 year old box of aluminum wiring, lead paint and asbestos and they sure as hell want to sell it for more when they retire.
fragmede 42 days ago [-]
What's juvenile is not knowing how prices get set, which leads to an oversimplified world view, which leads to thinking that location-based pay is "dumb". To price something, you take what it costs to make the thing, throw that out the window, and make up a number based on vibes. If you're lucky, that number is bigger than what it costs to make it, and the business grows. but if you've made crap, or any of a million other reasons why people aren't buying your stuff, then you have to sell it for less than it costs to make it, and the business might be in trouble.
rtpg 42 days ago [-]
People say this as if there’s some conspiracy.
But I think the uncoordinated explanation is just that annd top executives often operate in a world where informal quick access to a bunch of powerful people is important. And in that universe it simply makes sense to have people be in the same place.
And beyond that, in their eyes… why wouldn’t you want to live in these wonderful cities? Why wouldn’t you want to be in the office and work through things? These are people who self select through working being their life so they barely conceptualize alternatives
In the same way you can’t conceptualize why someone would want to be in the office, they can’t conceptualize why you wouldn’t.
conqrr 43 days ago [-]
levels.fyi has been of good use for the industry at providing tools to navigate the incosistencies with leveling across companies. Somewhat similar to what Leetcode did as well (not saying Im happy with the standard).
There's a lot more refinement that's needed for levels.fyi data:
1. Data goes stale pretty quickly. Salaries are on a downtrend now and many averages don't reflect it yet.
2. Data is overreported in the few popular reigons and companies. Bay area/FAANGetc
3. Values are inflated with stocks that aren't public companies.
4. Lots of companies are following weird vesting schedule now and that calculation isn't the simplified 4 year average of stock value.
aprilthird2021 42 days ago [-]
The website makes money by selling salary negotiation, so they have a bit of incentive to inflated salaries a bit
tester756 39 days ago [-]
Why does TC at Jane Street gets lower the higher u are? wtf
Yes. And extremely biased towards tech jobs. So take their data with a grain of salt.
If you use Levels.fyi data in a salary negotiation anywhere outside of SF or Seattle, you will probably get laughed at.
43 days ago [-]
anal_reactor 42 days ago [-]
Sad European noises.
derfnugget 42 days ago [-]
this post made me immediately reach out for a raise. im not good at this part of the job. i hate this part of the job. im an engineer. first, last, and most importantly.
bravetraveler 42 days ago [-]
Map of country, hones in on the west coast. Never change
renewiltord 42 days ago [-]
This is a nice market where you'll be hired if you're better, so it's also an average quality of engineer map.
c0nsumer 43 days ago [-]
This thing feels weird. In Southeast Michigan the popup is for "Ann Arbor Area", yet it stretches from VERY rural areas to Ann Arbor (a wealthy college town), across Detroit, across where all auto companies are, etc.
This makes it feel very not-representative nor accurate for the area as a whole.
EDIT: Ohh... clicking further, now I see. This is just an ad for a "salary negotiation" company. No thanks.
el_benhameen 43 days ago [-]
It may or may not be an ad, but I’ve found levels.fyi to be a valuable source of salary information, much more than a “salary negotiation company”. They’re far more accurate and detailed than, say, Glassdoor or Indeed.
aprilthird2021 42 days ago [-]
It's not bad to acknowledge that Levels sells salary negotiation, so they are more inclined to skew perception of salaries as higher, so more people look and say "Oh, I'm underpaid!"
While Glassdoor does not sell this service and thus has no incentive to overhype current salary distributions.
That said, there's still some surprising results. I would have expected NYC to be on par with Western Washington and the Bay Area, but it's significantly less, ~190K vs ~260K.
Some things have a global market and everyone is paying ~ the same price everywhere.
- Meat, to an extent
- Any oil-derived product
- Electronics
- Software
- IP
- Cars
- Clothes
Of course there are always local taxes, regulations, and logistical considerations that skew the price this way or that way by 10-30%, but these markets can be pretty efficient.
Taxes, Housing, Transportation, and Insurance is what eats up most of your expenses anyway. Housing varies wildly across the world. Many parts of the US now cost > $3,000 /mo to rent a median home. Most of those homes are probably selling for ~$500k putting your mortgage at current interest rates in the same ballpark of $3k /mo. For somoene making $120k that is 1/3 of their income. For someone making the national average (around $70k) that is 1/2 their total income. Just to mention, those areas (Seattle, San Fran, NYC) where you see $250k-300k salaries, those people are paying much higher than these figures. Probably $5-6k in rent or buying modest homes that just happen to cost $1.25M-1.5M
In the US you also can pay $1,000 (or more) /mo for health insurance. Most other parts of the world don't have this expense.
As of 2024, the average price of a new car is now $47,000 in the USA. Now not everyone is buying a new car but the used car market swells based on this figure.
Then you pay 15-30% in taxes on average for most people here.
So You add all that up and probably 2/3-3/4 of your money is gone.
I agree with you that things like clothing, consumer goods, software, meat, and oil are largely comparable globally now, but these goods only account for probably 10-20% of a person's monthly expenses.
Not to mention retirement. Because all these costs are so high, it means I need to put a larger percent of my paycheck to retirement so I can survive a few years of not working before I die. When basics like healthcare and housing are as high as I outlined, it means more money needs to go to retirement, which is money that can't be spent on these basic goods that you mention.
So yes, these goods you call out are in fact comparable around the world. But they only account for a relatively small portion of someone's expenses. The outstanding expenses are the most variable (housing, transportation, insurance, taxes).
- Real Estate did take up a larger % of my budget, but it was nicer
- The globalized products are only a small % of the budget but they're relatively much cheaper so I can have more/better/both
Of course this doesn't mean expensive cities are perfect or even good. I later moved from Toronto to Alberta and it's night-and-day better. Of course the lifestyle is different and some might not like that.
There's a big qualitative angle so you can't really compare these things on a spreadsheet, but more after-tax dollars is almost always better.
We're planning to create some of our own regional definitions and borders using our own submissions and that should offer some more tighter bounds. This was just a v1, and I think its already resonating with folks.
GeoJSON data for the map borders: https://github.com/PublicaMundi/MappingAPI/blob/master/data/...
Nielsen DMA regions: https://blocks.roadtolarissa.com/simzou/6459889
I think just using the 387 MSAs [1] instead of the 181 CSAs would get you far enough to cover all the major tech hubs.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metropolitan_statistical_area
If that data is submitted by individuals to a particular company, is it possible to see a lot more detailed heatmap, perhaps down to each address of each company?
There may be an off-the-grid remote developer in Steens Mountain somewhere, but there aren't any employers there.
This is just pre-tax TC.
When you take into account taxes and cost of living, comparing NYC to a place like Austin makes NYC TCs look positively stingy.
You can obviously exclude the top 25 percentile of salaries, since the app shows breakdowns by percentage, but I doubt levels.fyi has accurate data on the number of employees of each company in a particular region.
FAANG (and a few FAANG-adjacent) companies are the only ones paying close to decent wages, and even they've been making frankly egregious cuts to their protein-bar budgets lately.
Let's not sit around manufacturing skewed datasets that give people the wrong idea about what software engineers should get paid.
TL;DR: I love being an engineer in the Bay Area, but we truly are a bubble.
Because they skew the numbers upwards. Most of the market doesn't pay their wages.
Contrasting anecdata: I'm over 15 years of experience, started looking while employed, and got a 200k+ job in ~1 month. At an early stage startup in Bay Area. (this year)
I wonder what we did differently. My approach focused on why I'm a unique value prop to my target market following the "What have you achieved for what type of company/project" positioning statement formula.
In my comparison, games is still falling in real time and I've found nothing full time for almost a year. But I also randomly got cold called for some part time work that keeps me afloat.
We're here looking at a heatmap of pay across the entire US, and in most of the US it like like refusing anything less than $200k would be insisting that you're in the 90th+ percentile of software engineers in your area, which is for obvious reasons not something everyone can get away with.
Also why is Greater Denver Area in the middle of Nevada, and leaking in Wyoming?
And some numbers are wrong Missoula Area says $190k median, but linked page says $123k median
To a jobseeker, there's very little practical difference between "the pay for software engineering jobs here is extremely low" and "there are no software engineering jobs here".
> Also why is Greater Denver Area in the middle of Nevada...?
That's Eureka County. No idea why it's classified as "greater Denver area", but its total population is 1,855; it's basically a rounding error. I'd be surprised if more than one or two of them were software engineers, let alone were in this dataset.
I doubt that's what "Not enough data" means.
Not that it’s an excuse: I do find it kind of odd that I do the same job as another remote engineer and yet I’m paid a fraction? But to be fair I don’t have student loans and paid off my house in a few years, so cost of living, cost of education, etc. can reveal practical opportunity even if it enshrouds any definition of fairness.
I learned something today because of it.
Now I think of this as being like football (soccer!) teams. There is the division four league where the players are professional but often need a second job just to stay afloat - and there is the ridiculous heights of premier leagues
Players in the top of the game are not that much better - look at the stats and it’s maybe 10% more pass completion or shots on goal.
But the real issue is the teams - if a team is content in the fourth division, they don’t need to get a Saudi investor to bankroll millions so they can offer huge salaries.
They can offer low salaries knowing someone will turn up and only be 90% of the top rated ones.
I am not sure I understand why power laws work the way they do, a law firm needs hundreds of A players to service each client, a TV studio or football team only needs a handful because everyone watches the same show.
Is every business a SaaS business? Or are there businesses that can get 90% of the talent for 10% of the cost and make it work?
1. There's a HUGE difference in skill sets between software engineers. Some of us have deep understandings of algorithms, linear algebra, and CS theory, and others know how to style a button with appropriate margins. I'll leave it as an exercise to the reader to decide which of these is more difficult.
2. Inequity exists everywhere, and neurotic self-guilt doesn't really accomplish anything. The bottom line is we're all brought into this world with differing advantages/disadvantages across both nature and nurture.
Rather than bemoaning the inherent nature of a free market on a random news board, you'd be better off searching for methods of active altruism, donating to auditable charities (Charity Navigator and GiveWell come to mind), and actively helping those in need.
I have the former, but 95% of the value I bring to FAANG is the latter.
My job lately is to double the revenue of various products that were built by a thousand deep algorithm workers but got no attention in the attention economy, by identifying and improving which button color (eg) would direct the traffic. My simple work gets all the money directed to the company, but was far easier than the hard work of making The Thing. Because algorithm nerds often have no idea what is appealing or valuable to human customers.
No, I don’t think knowing how to perform an affine transform justifies a 20x better salary than the common man has access to. The vast majority of folks in tech are not building rocket ships and flying cities.
Software is everywhere. It manages life and safety critical things for millions (billions?) of people every day. So much of everything that goes on at every level is affected by software. Software is also unique in that one engineer's work output can be sold, at near zero cost, to a billion people in theory. That isn't actually true but you get the idea.
Software Engineer is just a new professional class. Its value proposition is high and it turns out a relatively small number of people have the mental model and aptitude to be really good at it.
[edit] Alaska and Hawaii aren't on here either so it should have been 'bigger than the continuous 48 states'.
You'd be surprised at how difficult it is to get liquidity for that stuff, often there are limits to the amount you can liquidate, some can't sell on private marketplace, some can only sell every once in a blue moon event, etc. This is all without mentioning that the "valuation" itself is typically pretty speculative.
Levels.fyi is treating this equity the same as public company RSUs, which is not the same at all.
Appreciate the feedback though, and definitely agree we can work on how we display the data and make it more clear.
1. Salary (straightforward, on regular schedule, and you'll get it)
2. Bonuses and RSUs (various vesting rules, and ways you can never see it)
3. Startup stock and (worse) stock options (probably worthless, vesting rules, and you might need an advisor to make sure you don't exercise and come out with a big negative)
But I still don't understand how non-tech people afford to live in SF. Wouldn't they be priced out?
1. Purchasing when market prices were lower, or inheriting a home. San Francisco has been expensive for decades, but it didn’t always require FAANG-level salaries to afford purchasing a home there.
2. Living in a rent-controlled unit and avoiding evictions (e.g., if the landlord wants to sell, move in, or redevelop the unit).
3. Qualifying for government-subsidized housing, in the form of either Section 8 (voucher-based housing assistance), below market rate rentals, or below market rate properties for purchase. Many Bay Area municipalities have a local housing authority that provides more information about local subsidized housing programs.
4. Shared living situations, whether it’s with family, friends, or strangers, helps reduce housing costs at the expense of needing to share space with others. I know many people in the Bay Area who wouldn’t be able to afford to live here without some type of shared accommodations.
5. Some employers subsidize housing expenses. For example, some universities in the Bay Area offer housing assistance to tenure-track faculty members, ranging from down payment assistance to zero-interest mortgages. There are some universities that sell homes to faculty and staff at below-market prices, with the stipulation that those properties get sold to other faculty and staff once they are put up for sale.
Guess there’s something to be said for being headquartered in Nashville.
It’s a bit sad the pay there seems to easily be twice what they pay in Japan :/
I could start chasing the $ again, but at this point I’m nearly financially independent and can almost just say fuck it.
$400k * 0.6 = $240k post tax
$240k - $36k rent = $204k
$204k - $50k annual expenses = $154k
So if you just work that job for 3-4 years you'll easily have a heavy down payment for a house, assuming no promo, no raises.
If you work the job for 7-8 years you can buy a house (more like a townhouse) all in cash. Not going to be the best house on the market, but it's doable.
This is all not considering investing in the stock market, raises, being frugal with your expenses, living with roommates to save up a bit, etc. there's lots of ways to parlay more money than most other people will ever make annually into a home
In a related note, I was checking for tech meetups (at meetup.com) in Missoula and Bozeman and except for Montana programmers, there's no much there. There are a few slack communities but nothing specific for technologies or other groups.
My completely uninformed guess is that a bunch of highly-paid engineers moved there during the pandemic for some reason I don't understand, rather than anything inherent to the tech jobs market in Missoula. If so, why Missoula (vs., say, Jackson Hole)? And if not, is there another plausible explanation?
https://www.bls.gov/oes/current/oes151252.htm
I'd like to know if the derived dollar values are the historic actualized or the current value. Because historically there was a real fortunate time to have your RSUs skyrocket, but now that things are stable/declining is the TC still that high?
If you're curious, SWE pay in AK is pretty low. I'd guess median in the 80k.
Sure, but I would argue that you're speaking imprecisely then and using a cliche or phrase that isn't technically accurate at best, and is actually misleading at worst. And when requested for clarity, you should say, "well almost all." Either that or we have different definitions of what the word "all" means[1].
If someone said "I have been to all the states in the US" would you expect that they have been to AK and HI?
[1]: The MW definition matches my understanding: https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/all
“All McD’s” - quite precise; literally all the McD’s.
“McD’s all across the country” - a much looser group, implies various McD’s spanning roughly coast to coast (hence “all across the country”), but not necessarily including the westernmost and easternmost McD’s - just a decent distribution of west-to-east, perhaps with no giant gaps (like missing the whole Midwest).
Fun fact: VCs own lots of corp and residential real estate. They want to drive people to live in their areas, pay more but houses cost more and it’s just a big con
But I think the uncoordinated explanation is just that annd top executives often operate in a world where informal quick access to a bunch of powerful people is important. And in that universe it simply makes sense to have people be in the same place.
And beyond that, in their eyes… why wouldn’t you want to live in these wonderful cities? Why wouldn’t you want to be in the office and work through things? These are people who self select through working being their life so they barely conceptualize alternatives
In the same way you can’t conceptualize why someone would want to be in the office, they can’t conceptualize why you wouldn’t.
There's a lot more refinement that's needed for levels.fyi data:
1. Data goes stale pretty quickly. Salaries are on a downtrend now and many averages don't reflect it yet.
2. Data is overreported in the few popular reigons and companies. Bay area/FAANGetc
3. Values are inflated with stocks that aren't public companies.
4. Lots of companies are following weird vesting schedule now and that calculation isn't the simplified 4 year average of stock value.
https://www.levels.fyi/companies/jane-street/salaries/softwa...
If you use Levels.fyi data in a salary negotiation anywhere outside of SF or Seattle, you will probably get laughed at.
This makes it feel very not-representative nor accurate for the area as a whole.
EDIT: Ohh... clicking further, now I see. This is just an ad for a "salary negotiation" company. No thanks.
While Glassdoor does not sell this service and thus has no incentive to overhype current salary distributions.
I do think it's much more accurate though