Salary Range Calculator
Salary ranges define the minimum, midpoint, and maximum pay for a given job grade or position. The midpoint typically represents the market rate for a fully competent performer. Range spread varies by job level — typically 40–60% for professional roles and 60–100% for executive positions. Understanding where an employee falls within the range is critical for pay equity analysis and merit planning.
Calculate Salary Range
Salary ranges should be reviewed and updated annually against market survey data. This tool provides estimates for educational purposes only.
Key Salary Range Metrics
| Metric | Formula | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Compa-Ratio | Actual Pay ÷ Midpoint | 1.00 = at market; <0.90 = below market; >1.10 = above market |
| Range Penetration | (Actual − Min) ÷ (Max − Min) | 0% = at minimum; 50% = at midpoint; 100% = at maximum |
| Range Spread | (Max − Min) ÷ Min × 100 | Typical: 40–60% professional, 60–100% executive |
Quartile Framework
Compensation professionals divide salary ranges into four quartiles:
- Q1 (0–25%) — New hires, those still developing in role. May signal retention risk if experienced.
- Q2 (25–50%) — Developing performers approaching full competency.
- Q3 (50–75%) — Fully competent performers meeting all expectations.
- Q4 (75–100%) — Top performers, long-tenured, or those with rare skills. Near promotion or range max.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good compa-ratio?
A compa-ratio of 0.95–1.05 indicates pay near market midpoint. Below 0.90 may signal underpayment; above 1.10 suggests the employee may be near range maximum and a candidate for promotion or a range adjustment. Aggregate compa-ratios for departments or job families help identify systemic pay issues.
How often should salary ranges be updated?
Best practice is to review ranges annually using fresh market survey data. In high-inflation or competitive labor markets, some organizations adjust mid-cycle. Ranges that are not updated lead to compression and difficulty attracting new talent.