Career Guide · 2026

Salary Negotiation for Teachers

Updated June 2026 · By the RISN team

Most teachers accept the first offer they're given — and leave thousands of dollars on the table. Negotiating is expected, rarely risky, and almost always worth it. Here's how teachers should approach the conversation.

Research the market rate for Teachers

Before any negotiation, teachers should know the market range for their role and city. Use Glassdoor, LinkedIn Salary, and Levels.fyi. Walk in with a number and a walkaway figure already decided.

What Teachers should say

State your target number clearly, anchored to your research and a specific accomplishment, then stop talking. Silence after the ask is the most powerful tool in any negotiation — the first person to speak usually concedes ground.

Handling pushback as one of the teachers

If the answer is 'no budget,' teachers should pivot to total compensation — signing bonus, earlier review date, additional PTO, or equity. These are often easier to approve than base salary and still move the total package.

Let RISN do this for you

Stop guessing. RISN Salary Negotiation Toolkit is built to help teachers specifically — start for $4.99.

Try RISN Salary Negotiation Toolkit →