How to Negotiate a Higher Salary
Most people accept the first number they're offered, and most companies expect that — the initial offer is rarely the ceiling. Learning how to negotiate a higher salary is less about being pushy and more about showing up with better information and a clearer ask than the other person expects. This guide covers how to build your case, when to bring it up, how to handle pushback, and what to actually do with the raise once you have it.
Why Most People Never Negotiate a Higher Salary
Salary negotiation feels risky, so most people avoid it entirely — but a single unnegotiated offer doesn't just cost you that first paycheck, it compounds. Future raises are typically a percentage of your current base, so a lower starting number follows you through every review after it. Employers generally build some room into an initial offer precisely because they expect a conversation; simply asking, respectfully and with a reason, often costs nothing and can meaningfully change the outcome.
Building Your Case Before You Ask
Walking in with a specific, well-supported number is far more effective than a vague request for "more":
High impact
- Research actual market rates for your role, level, and location — not a single number, but a realistic range from multiple sources
- List concrete accomplishments with results attached (revenue, time saved, problems solved) rather than just responsibilities
- Practice saying your number out loud beforehand — the pause after asking feels longer than it is, and rehearsing makes it less uncomfortable in the moment
Medium impact
- Compare offers or market data from similar companies, if you genuinely have them
- Time the ask around a performance review, a completed win, or a new offer — moments when your value is freshest in the conversation
Low impact (despite the hype)
- Vague appeals to personal financial need — employers pay for value delivered, not personal expenses
- Ultimatums you're not actually prepared to follow through on
Indeed's guide to negotiating salary has a useful breakdown of scripts and timing if you want more detail before your conversation.
When and How to Bring It Up
Timing changes your leverage more than almost anything else:
| Moment | Leverage | Why |
|---|---|---|
| After a written job offer | High | You've proven you're the chosen candidate — this is the strongest point to negotiate |
| At a scheduled performance review | Medium-high | Expected context for the conversation; less awkward to initiate |
| Right after a major win | Medium-high | Your value is freshest and most visible |
| Mid-project, out of context | Low | Feels abrupt and disconnected from a clear justification |
Once you're in the conversation, keep it simple: state the number, state the reason briefly, then stop talking. Over-explaining or apologizing for asking undercuts the ask itself.
Handling Pushback
A "no" or "not right now" isn't necessarily final. If the answer is no on base salary, ask what would need to be true for it to become a yes — a specific timeline, a milestone, a review date. If money truly isn't available, non-salary items are often more flexible: additional vacation days, remote or flexible work, a earlier review date, a training or education budget, or a title change that matters for your next move. Whatever you agree to, get it in writing, even if it's just a follow-up email summarizing the conversation.
What to Do With the Raise
A higher salary only changes your financial position if it changes your saving rate too — lifestyle creep quietly absorbs raises for a lot of people within a few months. Before the new number even hits your account, decide where a meaningful slice of it goes: topping up an emergency fund is a strong first move if yours isn't fully funded yet, and updating your personal finance spreadsheet to reflect the new income makes it easy to see whether the extra money is actually being saved or just quietly disappearing into everyday spending.
The Payoff
A single successful negotiation that adds a modest percentage to your base salary is worth pursuing again at every future raise and offer, since the increase compounds year over year rather than resetting. Compare that to the cost of staying silent: the gap between what you asked for and what you accepted follows you through every subsequent raise calculated as a percentage of it. For more ways to strengthen your finances, browse the make-money category or revisit simple budgeting methods for beginners to put the new number to work.
This is general career information, not personalized financial, legal, or HR advice — norms and leverage vary by employer, industry, and location.