The Remote Pay Penalty

Remote US tech roles pay about 11% less than onsite at the same seniority level — Senior $151,000 remote vs $170,000 onsite; Mid $125,000 vs $140,000. Call it the Remote Discount.

Pay figures are platform-estimated posted ranges, not employer disclosure. The honest comparison is like-for-like: same seniority, remote vs onsite.

SoviaJobs ResearchData through June 2026

Key findings

  • The same-level remote discount is ~11% — about 10.7% (mid) and 11.3% (senior).
  • Senior: $151,000 remote vs $170,000 onsite — a $19,000 gap.
  • Pooled across all levels the gap looks like only 9.9% — a composition illusion (Simpson’s paradox), not the real penalty.

The Remote Discount, by seniority

−11.3%

Senior-level remote discount

$151K remote vs $170K onsite

−10.7%

Mid-level remote discount

$125K remote vs $140K onsite

Within-tier remote pay penalty (±%, remote vs onsite)

Each bar is the within-tier gap between remote and onsite median pay — observational (composition, not a causal effect of going remote). One small tier (new-grad) shows a positive sign on a thin sample.

Why the “overall” gap lies to you

If you simply pool every remote posting and every onsite posting and compare the medians, the gap looks like only 9.9% — smaller than the 10.7%11.3% you see inside each level. That is not because remote pays better than it seems. It is a classic composition trap: remote postings lean toward higher-paying senior roles, so the remote pool gets a senior-pay boost that partly cancels the within-level discount.

Two ways to read the same data

Naive (pool everything)9.9%
Like-for-like (same seniority, mid + senior)11%

Same dataset; the only difference is whether you control for seniority. The honest answer to “do remote jobs pay less” is the like-for-like number.

Is 11% the price of freedom?

Run the geo-arbitrage math before you flinch. An onsite senior role at $170,000 in a high-cost metro can leave you with less disposable income than the remote version at $151,000 from a city where rent is half as much. Add back the ~200+ hours a year you would have spent commuting, and the 11% discount often disappears — or inverts.

How to use this in negotiation: if an employer quotes you the remote number, you now have the receipt that the discount is real but bounded. Ask whether the band is location- adjusted, and whether a hybrid arrangement unlocks the onsite band. Note that we do not have a separate pay figure for hybrid roles in this dataset — so treat any “hybrid pays more” claim as unverified here.

How this was measured (n=204,223)

Sample: 204,223 postings · Window: 2026-03-20 – 2026-06-09

Method

  • Median estimated posted midpoint compared remote vs onsite within each seniority tier.
  • Headline same-level discount = average of the mid-level and senior-level within-tier penalties (the two largest clean tiers).
  • Naive overall gap = n-weighted median of all remote vs all onsite postings, shown to illustrate the composition effect.

Limitations

  • Salary figures are platform-estimated posted ranges, not employer disclosure.
  • No separate hybrid pay figure exists in this dataset — hybrid is not compared.
  • Corpus is tech & professional roles, not all US jobs; within-tier pay can still mix sub-roles.

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

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Remote pay penalty FAQ

Do remote jobs pay less than onsite jobs?
At the same seniority level, yes. In 204,223 analyzed US tech postings, remote roles pay about 11% less than onsite at the mid and senior levels (Senior $151,000 remote vs $170,000 onsite). These are platform-estimated posted ranges, not employer disclosure.
How big is the remote pay penalty?
About 11% at the same seniority — 10.7% for mid-level and 11.3% for senior-level roles. The entry-level gap is smaller (4.2%), because entry pay is compressed everywhere.
Why does the overall remote-vs-onsite gap look smaller than 11%?
Because remote postings skew toward higher-paying senior roles. Pooling all levels, the naive gap is only about 9.9% — the mix hides the within-level penalty. Comparing like-for-like (same seniority) is the honest number, and that gap is ~11%.
Is the remote pay penalty worth it?
That is a personal calculation. Giving up ~11% of pay can still net out ahead once you remove commuting cost and time, and a remote salary can stretch much further in a lower-cost city. The discount is the price of geographic freedom — sometimes a bargain, sometimes not.
Where does this remote salary data come from?
From 204,223 deduplicated US tech and professional postings collected by SoviaJobs (window through June 2026). Pay = platform-estimated posted ranges (posted or estimated), compared within each seniority tier.