Your Salary History?
139,690 Views | 483 Replies
...
OregonAggie
7:58a, 5/15/24
2003 x
2005 2x
2008 3x
2012 3x - industry change
2013 3.5x - back to original industry
2015 4x
2017 5x
2020 5x -major role change based less on bonuses
2024 7x

Not doing too shabby for myself and I have a pretty high quality of life doing what I do.

J182
4:50p, 5/23/24
2013 - 35k
2014 - 35k (changed industry/company)
2015 - 27k + commission (moved from straight salary)
2017 - 36k (moved roles within company)
2018 - 45k (new company)
2020 - 55k (merit raise)
2022 - 75k (promotion + raise)
2023 - 68k (new company after 15 months of burnout in previous role)
👽
infinity ag
4:27p, 5/28/24
I don't know how you guys make 11x etc. I am at 3.55x and I started about 26 years ago. Lots of super successful folks here.

I am talking only salary though. I am doing very very well in my investing which dwarfs my salary.
AJ02
4:29p, 5/28/24
In reply to infinity ag
Perhaps they started really, really low salary?

But yeah, reading this thread can sure make lots of people feel pretty poor.
infinity ag
4:30p, 5/28/24
In reply to AJ02
AJ02 said:

Perhaps they started really, really low salary?

But yeah, reading this thread can sure make lots of people feel pretty poor.

Yes, that is what I thought. Because the ones who say 11x don't say what x is. Or I have no way of guessing the range.
Or maybe they made 100k in Dallas and switched jobs and made 250k in San Francisco which may amount to the same thing because SF is so expensive.
J182
4:50p, 5/28/24
In reply to AJ02
My first job as a student worker was at 5.15/hour. Which sounds insane to even think I was able to live off of that.
👽
AJ02
7:17p, 5/28/24
In reply to J182
Yeah, at 15 I was making $5.15/hr. At 21 while working during my time at A&M I think I was making $9/hr at UCS.
infinity ag
10:53p, 5/28/24
In reply to J182
J182 said:

My first job as a student worker was at 5.15/hour. Which sounds insane to even think I was able to live off of that.

My first job was a bagger at Albertson's, College Avenue, College Stn. I also worked as a book stacker at Evans Library but don't remember the pay I got. I still have the paystub of my first paycheck. I have to go check but I believe it was about the same - $5.30/hr. My credit card bill for the month was around $100 and my rent share was $125.

If you take this wage of $5.30 which translates to about $10,600/year, then my 'x' multiple is huge.
Green2Maroon
8:49p, 5/29/24
In reply to infinity ag
My first job was a bagger at Albertsons at 2818 and Longmire in 2000. I was 16 and started at $5.60 per hour.
Ugly
10:52a, 6/30/25
In reply to Ugly
Ugly said:

Interesting topic to scroll through.

Nuclear Engineering degree,

2010: x
2015: 1.22x
2021 :1.61x (2020 was weird)
2024 :1.97x (projected)

Starting x wasn't super low and I've played it a bit conservative with only one job change (when my previous company went under), but I have plenty of job security due to my experience in a niche industry.

As for the six figure question, I don't have much of an issue with keeping up with the Jones's, but kids are just flat out expensive, and I did "indulge" a bit to let my wife stay at home to raise the kids for several years. I got lucky and managed to buy a house at a reasonable price before the last explosion, drive old cars, and had no student debt, so I have gotten by with other expenses increasing.
Update:
2010: x
2015: 1.22x
2021 :1.61x (2020 was weird)
2025 :2.13x


Inflation adjusted:
2010: x
2015: 1.20x
2021 :1.36x
2025 :1.57x

Shelton98
11:59a, 6/30/25
2000 - x
2017 - 2.5x
2025 - 6.1x

Chemical Engineering degree
Seamaster
1:34p, 7/1/25
2003: x
2025: 14.3x

Same industry.
_lefraud_
12:39p, 7/3/25
2011 - x
2014 - 1.4x
2019 - x
2025 - 3.5x

Transitioned from coaching to insurance in 2019
MRB10
9:13p, 7/3/25
Base salary:

2010: x
2014: 1.47x - role change, same company
2017: 2.04x - company change
2022: 3.43x - department change
2025: 4.24x - promotion to management

Bonus increased from 5% to 30% over this span
RSUs at 15% of base starting in 2026

Insurance industry
SpreadsheetAg
6:57a, 7/4/25
In reply to SpreadsheetAg
SpreadsheetAg said:

SpreadsheetAg said:

Base salary Only (no other compensations like bonuses, etc)
2004 1.00x (first job out of A&M)
2005 1.20x (company change)
2007 1.79x (company change)
2009 2.25x (promotion)
2010 2.65x (company change)
2014 3.71x (moving overseas for same company)

Projected 2015 - if all goes right: 5.86x


Update - lasted about a year; then oil downturn got me while I was in Australia...

2016 - 2.7x (contract work )
2016 - 3.1x (full time)
2017 - 3.4x (promotion)
2019 - 4.0x (promotion)
2021 - wage stagnation during downturn but I've kept my Job and made some good bonuses - but base salary hasn't moved much


Update:
2021 - 4.5x Changed Campaniles
2024 - 5.4x Raises + Promotion
cgary11
11:52p, 7/9/25
TXAGGIES
9:58a, 7/10/25
Are we talking pure base salary or do you include:
  • SAR's
  • RSU's
  • PSU's
  • Annual Bonus
  • Car Allowance
  • Living Allowance

My Salary from my first job is ~6x from the base, but much of my compensation is in those bullet points vs what my base salary is.
Gordon McKernan
2:11p, 7/16/25
Now vs summer of 2011 when I started my first 'real' job.

  • Base Salary: 4.9x
  • Total Comp: 7.9x
AggiEE
11:56p, 7/23/25
In reply to Gordon McKernan
Gordon McKernan said:

Now vs summer of 2011 when I started my first 'real' job.

  • Base Salary: 4.9x
  • Total Comp: 7.9x



Did you switch from Construction Science to Big Tech?
Prince_Ahmed
3:59p, 8/1/25
Fun thread! BS in econ. Same company since 2009

2004 1.0x (first job out of A&M)
2005 1.2x (laid off, new job)
2009 2.4x (new job)
2015 3.2x
2020 4.9x
2025 7.7x

AggiEE
12:09a, 8/5/25
How are people getting such high multiples?

Are your starting salaries just very low?

Not even 3x my starting salary, back in 2009. Traditional engineering field.

This thread isn't very helpful without more context
Seamaster
7:21a, 8/5/25
In reply to AggiEE
AggiEE said:

How are people getting such high multiples?

Are your starting salaries just very low?

Not even 3x my starting salary, back in 2009. Traditional engineering field.

This thread isn't very helpful without more context


I think in my case, my starting was pretty low even by comparison for the times. (30k in 2004).

DRE06
9:46a, 8/5/25
There is part of your answer.

A 7x from a $30k salary is $210
A 3x from a $70k engineering salary is also $210
f burg ag
5:26p, 8/5/25
In reply to AggiEE
AggiEE said:

How are people getting such high multiples?

Are your starting salaries just very low?

Not even 3x my starting salary, back in 2009. Traditional engineering field.

This thread isn't very helpful without more context

Industry is another big factor. I am in public accounting and my multiple today is >30x more than starting in 1997.
cevans_40
8:42p, 8/5/25
In reply to f burg ag
f burg ag said:

AggiEE said:

How are people getting such high multiples?

Are your starting salaries just very low?

Not even 3x my starting salary, back in 2009. Traditional engineering field.

This thread isn't very helpful without more context

Industry is another big factor. I am in public accounting and my multiple today is >30x more than starting in 1997.


Kirky
4:13p, 8/6/25
Cool thread - hope to remember to come update this in 5 years

Graduated 2019 (PPA - Tax)

2019 - x - Big 4 Public Accounting
2020 - x + $5K CPA Exam passing bonus // COVID = no annual raise
2021 - 1.23x + OT/ Client Commissions // Moved to smaller local CPA firm
2022 - 1.33x + OT/Client Commissions // Mid-year raise (COL/Inflation was higher than normal and firm wanted to help out)
2023 - 1.42x + OT/Client Commissions // Annual Raise
2024 - 1.49x + OT/Client Commissions // Annual Raise
2024 - 1.45x + OT // Career Change to Analyst at Midstream company (burnt out from public accounting)
2024 - 1.5x + Bonus // Role Change at same company - Accounting role opened up randomly
2025 - 1.56x + Bonus // Annual Raise
hbc07
12:33p, 8/31/25
In reply to hbc07
hbc07 said:

hbc07 said:

2011: .33x (graduated & couldn't find work.)
2012: 1x
2013: 1.12x
2014: 1.27x
2015: 1.33x
2015 again: 1.42x.
2016: 1.42x
2017: 1.45x
2018: 1.66x (moved cross country to different office of same firm)


2022: 2.51x (job change)
2024: 2.96x (contemplated quitting, boss enticed me to stay, expecting another raise in June)

More or less toiled away at a job where I was underpaid for the first ~10 years of my career. I think I'm still somewhat underpaid at my current job, but I enjoy it, feel appreciated, and have a lot of perks that I would lose if I went anywhere else.

2025: 3.4x (internal transfer within overarching corporate umbrella. comprised of base plus guaranteed minimum commissions even if I do no commissionable work but the commissions have the possibility of being substantial and I'm already apparently in line to open up a branch office... so much less stress and I take no work home with me except stories about the day)
ktownag08
7:45p, 8/31/25
In reply to ktownag08
ktownag08 said:

ktownag08 said:

ktownag08 said:

ktownag08 said:

Working for 4 years and only 1.44x where I started on base salary, but I started fairly high. Have good bonus opportunity on top.


Great thread! Interesting to go back and see my own post from 2013. Here's my update with just switching companies earlier this year.

2017: 2.03x + 20% bonus (+ sizable off-cycle bonus opportunities, it's a very small company with a generous CEO)


Seems this pops up every 4 years for me. Anyways, here's the progression:

2009: x (no bonus)
2013: 1.44x + bonus
2017: 2.03x + regular bonus + off cycle bonuses
2021: 3.43x base, 5.33x with bonus + equity options that could push ever higher

Worth noting I'm at the same company as 2017, but it sold, and I've been fortunate to rapidly climb the corporate ladder.



Still same company. Kept climbing although have likely peaked, but I'm happy with where I'm at in the hierarchy...

2024: 6.05x base, ~14x w/ bonus + equity options


Once again, same company and got promoted again. Absolutely have peaked in this company, but I could ride this for a long while...

2025: 7.4x base, 20x w/ bonus + equity options
Joe Schillaci 48
10:30a, 9/18/25
I have been retired for many years, but I keep this number around to humble myself.

1963- $77.00 a month.
E-1 USAF basic training. However, it did include room & board and medical care (which came into use in 1967 & probably is the reason I am still here today at 80).
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