Salary negotiation is one of the highest-return activities in personal finance, and it’s almost completely underutilized. Studies consistently show that a majority of employees accept the first offer they receive without negotiating. The people who do negotiate typically get more money. And because raises and future salaries are often calculated as a percentage of your current pay, a successful negotiation ripples forward financially for years.
The discomfort of asking is real. But so is the cost of not asking.
Do the Research Before You Do Anything Else
Walking into a salary conversation without data is like showing up to a debate without knowing your subject. Research comparable salaries for your role, experience level, and location using tools like Glassdoor, LinkedIn Salary, and Levels. FYI, and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Come in with a specific, defensible number — not a range, which always gets anchored to the lower end.
Know Your Value Concretely
Your research tells you what the market pays for someone with your skills. But your negotiation gets stronger when you can also articulate what you specifically bring. What results have you delivered? What problems have you solved? Quantifying your contributions in dollars, percentages, or concrete outcomes makes your case far more compelling than general claims about being hardworking.
Time Your Ask Strategically
The best time to negotiate is when you have leverage—when evaluating a job offer, after a strong performance review, after completing a major project, or after receiving a competing offer. The worst time is when you’ve recently made a mistake or when the company is clearly in financial difficulty.
Use Silence as a Tool
After you name your number, stop talking. Many people blurt out concessions immediately after stating their ask because silence feels uncomfortable. Let it be uncomfortable. Give the other person space to respond. The silence almost always works in your favor.
A Simple Script for a New Job Offer
“I’m very excited about this opportunity. Based on my research and the experience I bring, I was expecting something closer to [X]. Is there flexibility in the base salary?” That’s it. Brief, confident, non-apologetic, and leaving room for dialogue.
Negotiate the Full Package
Base salary isn’t everything. If the number truly can’t move, negotiate other things: remote work flexibility, extra vacation, a signing bonus, accelerated review timelines, a professional development budget, or equity. Sometimes these are easier to approve than base salary increases and can be worth significant money.



