Are you being paid what your work is worth?
Tell us your role, your area, and your experience. We will show you the pay range for that work, using federal wage data, and where you land in it.
Honest numbers, plainly explained
The pay range comes from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the wage data the government publishes each year, delivered through the U.S. Department of Labor's CareerOneStop. It is a neutral, public benchmark. Think of it as a well sourced estimate, not a personalized figure and not financial advice.
What it can tell you: the typical pay range for your kind of work in your metro area, and roughly where people at your experience level tend to land.
What it leaves out: these are base wages. They do not include tips, commissions, bonuses, stock or equity, or overtime, which are a large part of pay in some jobs, so your real total can run higher. The figures are grouped by occupation and metro, not your exact title, ZIP, employer, or degree, and they are published on a one to two year lag. Use the range as a starting point for your own research and a number to negotiate from, not a promise of what any job pays. The benefits we list are what is typical for your field, not an offer from any employer.
Knowing the number is step one
If your pay looks low, the next question is what to do about it. A raise helps. So does what happens to the money once it arrives. That is the work we do with people every day.
Book your free Financial Freedom AssessmentNo cost, no pressure. A real conversation about your whole picture.