by Rat Race Rebellion May 31, 2026
Pay transparency laws have changed what remote job postings look like. A few years ago, most listings hid the salary entirely. Now you’ll often see a range printed right there in the posting – often a wide one. “$50,000–$120,000.” “$75K–$160K.” Sometimes just “up to” a single number.
It feels like progress, and in some ways it is. You at least know roughly where the role sits before you spend an hour on an application. But the range itself is doing more (and less) work, than most people assume. If you read it as “this is what I could earn here if I negotiate well,” you’re going to be disappointed surprisingly often.
The Range Isn’t a Negotiation Window. It’s an Organizational Structure.
The most useful thing to know about a posted pay range is this: it usually isn’t the space the company is willing to negotiate within. It’s the space the company has defined as the band for this kind of role, which usually contains multiple seniority levels inside it.
A range that reads “$50,000–$120,000” often means something like “we have an entry-level version of this role at the bottom of the band, a mid-level version in the middle, and a senior version at the top.” Companies don’t always say that out loud, but it’s the structure underneath the number you see. You aren’t negotiating up from $50,000 toward $120,000. You’re being slotted into the level the company thinks you fit, and being paid the band for that level. If your experience matches the senior version of the role, you’ll be considered for the top of the band. If it matches the entry-level version, the top of the range was never on the table for you regardless of how the negotiation went.
That distinction matters more than it sounds, because it means the useful question in any salary conversation isn’t “where in the range can I land?” – it’s “which level am I being considered for, and what’s the range for that level specifically?”
For Remote Roles, the Range Also Covers Multiple Markets
Here’s the piece that’s specific to remote work, and it’s the one most people miss.
When a company hires someone in-office, the location is fixed and the pay band is built for that local market. When a company hires remotely, it has to decide what market to price the role against – and that decision happens before you ever see the posted range. Three approaches are common in 2026, and each one produces a very different range. The shape of the range often signals which approach a company uses.
Single national rate. One number for the role, regardless of where the employee lives. Ranges for these roles tend to be narrower in the posting because the company has already eliminated geography as a variable. If you see a remote posting with a range like “$70,000–$85,000,” there’s a reasonable chance you’re looking at a national rate. Often the floor and the ceiling are both real; every hire at that level lands somewhere inside that band, no matter where they sit
Location-adjusted (geo-banded). The most common approach now – used by an estimated 71% of employers with workers in multiple locations. The company prices you against your local market, often using formal tier multipliers. The posted range for these roles tends to be wider because it has to stretch to cover the highest-cost market and the lowest-cost one within the same listing. A range like “$50,000–$120,000” is usually this – and your actual offer depends heavily on which tier the company places your zip code into. Two people doing identical work at this company can land 30% apart based on where they live.
Headquarters-based. A shrinking number of companies still pay everyone at the rate of the company’s HQ market – typically a major coastal metro. These postings are rare now but worth recognizing: a relatively narrow range that looks high for the work is sometimes an HQ-based role, which can pay above-market for candidates outside the HQ city. Most companies have moved away from this approach because it’s expensive, but it still exists in specific firms and specific roles.
A few things follow from this. A wide range on a remote posting isn’t necessarily a negotiation invitation – it’s frequently a sign that the company has multiple geographic tiers baked in. A narrow range isn’t necessarily stingy, it often means the company has chosen one rate for everyone, which can be a meaningfully better deal for candidates in lower-cost markets and a worse one for candidates in expensive ones. The honest read is that the range alone doesn’t tell you what your offer will be without knowing which pricing model the company uses and where you sit in it.
This is also why internal equity matters more at distributed companies. If everyone on your future team is in a low-cost market and you’d be the only one in San Francisco, the company has to weigh paying you the SF rate against the precedent it sets for everyone else. Distributed teams introduce real tension between consistency within a market and consistency across the team, and that tension quietly shapes where your specific offer lands.
The Top of the Range Is Almost Never the Actual Offer – Especially for Remote
Most offers in any band cluster in the bottom-to-middle of it. The top of the range exists for two reasons that aren’t “what we expect to pay most candidates.”
The first reason is legal compliance. Pay transparency laws in 17 states plus Washington, D.C. require the posted range to reflect what the company would actually pay, including for the most senior version of the role and for candidates with rare qualifications. The top of the band is often a real number for someone, but rarely for the typical hire.
The second reason is structural. A wide range hits its top number only when the most senior level and the most expensive market align – a rare combination, and almost never the typical hire.
What this means for you: assume the typical offer lands well below the top of the band. If you’ve done the work to know what the role pays at your level in your market, you’ll know whether what you’re being offered is real movement or whether you’re being asked to celebrate the floor.
What the Range Leaves Out (Especially for Remote)
Even a generous range usually doesn’t include several things that materially affect what a remote job is actually worth. The remote-specific omissions are the ones most people miss.
The geographic adjustment itself. Some companies post a range that already includes any geo adjustment for your area. Others post a national range and apply the geo adjustment after you accept. The posting almost never tells you which approach the company uses, which means the same posted number can produce very different actual offers depending on where you live. Always ask.
Equipment. A company that provides a laptop, monitor, and the rest of the standard kit is offering roughly $1,500–$2,000 of real value that a bring-your-own-device employer isn’t. For roles where you’d need to buy your own setup, that’s worth folding directly into the comparison.
Home-office stipend and internet reimbursement. Some companies offer $500–$1,500 a year for home-office setup, plus a recurring stipend or reimbursement for internet. Others offer nothing. This is one of the biggest remote-specific differences between employers and almost never appears in a posted range.
Then the generic omissions — which still apply, but you probably already know to look for them:
Bonus, equity, and sign-on. The posted band is almost always base pay only. A role with a 15% target bonus and a $5,000 sign-on is meaningfully different from one without either, even if the base ranges look identical.
Benefits. Retirement match, paid time off, health coverage. A modestly lower base with strong benefits frequently beats a higher base with thin coverage, especially if you’re insuring a family.
The honest version of “what does this remote role pay” is the full compensation package at your level, in your market, with all adjustments and reimbursements applied. That’s almost never what’s printed in the posting.
The Bottom Line
You don’t need to become a compensation expert to use this. You just need to stop reading the range as a price tag and start reading it as a structure with several variables baked in. Two questions get you most of the way there:
“At what level am I being considered, and where does that put me in the range?”
“How does the company price remote roles based on my location, the company’s headquarters, or with a single national rate?”
The answers will tell you more about what you’re actually being offered than the posted range ever will. The people who navigate remote pay well aren’t the ones who memorized negotiation tactics – they’re the ones who understand the mechanics underneath the number and ask the right questions because of it. Negotiation still matters. It just matters less than the four or five other things that have already shaped your offer before you ever sit down to talk.
- Why Two Nearly Identical Remote Jobs Can Pay Completely Different Amounts
- Non-Phone Remote Jobs 2026
- Hiring Company Roundups
- 15 Companies Offering Benefits That Actually Support Remote Work
