Experience vs Salary in Tech (2026)
median posted-pay change across the first two years of required experience
+$12K
the year-3 jump (2+ → 3+)
$37.5K
gained from year 3 to year 10
$174.5K
median at 10+ years
The first two years of experience are worth almost nothing: median posted tech pay moves from $126K at 0+ years to $125K at 2+ years — a $1K change. The real jump arrives at year 3.
Figures are midpoints of market pay ranges shown to candidates (posted or estimated) by required experience — not individual raises or employer-disclosed pay.
Key findings
- Median posted pay moves just $1K across the first two years of required experience ($126K → $125K).
- The first real jump is at year 3: +$12K into the 3+ year band ($137K).
- From year 3 to year 10, posted pay rises $37.5K to $174.5K — that is where experience finally pays.
The curve: drag to your years
Move the slider to your experience and watch where you land on the real pay curve. The line is flat — even slightly downhill — through the first two years, then bends upward at year 3.
0+: $126K
Each point is the median midpoint of the market pay ranges shown for postings asking for that minimum experience — posted or estimated, not employer-disclosed pay.
Why the curve stays asleep until year 3
It is tempting to read a flat early curve as proof that experience does not matter. It is not. What you are seeing is how employers price a requirement, not how an individual’s pay grows. Postings that ask for 0, 1, or 2 years are all fishing in the same early-career pool, and they advertise nearly identical bands — $126K, $121.5K, and $125K respectively. A second year of experience, on paper, buys you almost nothing in the listing.
The wall breaks at year 3. The 3+ year tier jumps to $137K (+$12K over the 2+ band), and the climb continues steadily — $150K at 5+, $162.5K at 7+, and $174.5K at 10+. That is roughly $37.5K of upside concentrated in the years after you clear the three-year threshold. The lesson for early-career job seekers is blunt but freeing: if your pay feels stuck in years one and two, the market — not you — is the reason. This is the same machinery behind the entry-level paradox, where “entry-level” postings quietly demand multiple years while paying barely more than truly open roles.
One honest wrinkle: the 15+ year bucket dips below the 10+ tier. That is a thin-sample artifact, not a real pay cut — the deepest-tenure postings mix scarce staff-level ICs with lower-paying long-service roles, dragging the median down. Read the 10+ figure as the dependable late-career anchor and treat the 15+ point as directional.
The numbers
$1K
pay change across the first two years
0+ → 2+ years
+$12K
the year-3 jump (2+ → 3+)
$174.5K
median at 10+ years
n=11,872
$37.5K
pay gained from year 3 to year 10
How this was measured (n=204,223)
Sample: 204,223 postings · Window: 2026-03-20 – 2026-06-09
Method
- Postings bucketed by the minimum years of experience parsed from structured posting metadata.
- Per bucket: median / p25 / p75 of the market pay-range midpoint shown to candidates.
- The curve plots the bucket medians; the slider snaps to the nearest published bucket.
Limitations
- Median = midpoint of a market pay range shown to candidates (posted or estimated), not individual raises or employer disclosure.
- The 15+ year bucket is thin and mixes role types; treat it as directional.
- Corpus is US 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.