The Entry-Level Paradox

68.2% of “entry-level” US tech jobs require 2+ years of experience, based on 204,223 analyzed postings. Nearly 14.5% demand 3+ years. The label says entry-level; the requirements do not.

If you did everything right and still got silence, the listings are part of the problem — not you.

SoviaJobs ResearchData through June 2026

Key findings

  • 68.2% of “entry-level” tech postings require 2+ years of experience.
  • 14.5% require 3 or more years — well beyond any reasonable entry definition.
  • True entry roles pay $112,500; the experience-padded ones pay only $118,000 (4.9% more) for a lot more demanded.

The numbers

68.2%

of 'entry-level' jobs require 2+ years

n=29,285

14.5%

require 3+ years

n=29,285

$112,500

median pay — true 0–1 yr entry

$118,000

median pay — '2+ yr entry'

2 in 3 “entry-level” jobs aren’t entry-level

Each square is one of 100 “entry-level” postings. The shaded block is the 68.2% that quietly demand 2+ years of experience — only the 31.8% in muted are genuinely open to newcomers.

Experience demanded inside “entry-level” roles

Splitting the 29,285 entry-tagged postings that state a requirement into non-overlapping bands: a minority are genuinely open to newcomers.

True entry (0–1 yr)31.8%
Requires 2 yrs53.7%
Requires 3+ yrs14.5%

What entry-level pay actually looks like

The experience curve barely moves in the first two years — the first real jump only arrives at year 3 ($125,000 $137,000). So the “2+ year entry-level” job asks for more while paying close to the same.

How this was measured (n=29,285)

Sample: 29,285 postings · Window: 2026-03-20 – 2026-06-09

Method

  • Postings tagged 'entry-level' that also state a minimum-experience requirement.
  • Experience parsed from structured posting metadata, not free text.
  • Median posted midpoint compared across true-entry vs experience-padded tiers.

Limitations

  • Some postings omit an experience requirement entirely and are excluded.
  • Salary figures are platform-estimated posted ranges, not employer disclosure.
  • Corpus is tech & professional roles, not all US jobs.

Salary figures are platform-estimated posted ranges (posted or estimated), not employer disclosure. Corpus is tech & professional roles.

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Entry-level paradox FAQ

How many 'entry-level' jobs actually require experience?
Across 29,285 US tech postings tagged 'entry-level' that state an experience requirement, 68.2% require 2 or more years of experience and 14.5% require 3 or more.
Do 'entry-level' jobs requiring more experience pay more?
Only modestly. The median posted pay for true 0–1 year entry roles is $112,500, versus $118,000 for 'entry-level' roles that quietly require 2+ years — a 4.9% gap.
Is the entry-level job market really this hard?
For tech, the data says yes: most postings labeled 'entry-level' are not truly entry-level. If you did everything right and still got silence, the listings themselves are part of the problem — not you.
Where does this data come from?
From 204,223 deduplicated US tech and professional job postings collected by SoviaJobs (window through June 2026). Experience requirements are parsed from posting metadata. Salary figures are platform-estimated posted ranges, not employer disclosure.